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Fan-built, not official

Built by a long-time football fan who wanted the World Cup laid out properly.

This site started with a simple frustration: every World Cup, the same tabs pile up. One page has the fixtures, another has the groups, another has a bracket image, and none of them quite let you think through the tournament the way a fan actually does.

From Brazil 2014 to World Cup 2026, that is 12 years of watching, arguing, filling out brackets, checking kickoff dates, and trying to make sense of possible paths. After enough tournaments, you notice the same gap: lots of football pages exist, but very few are built for someone who wants to sit with the whole tournament and play it forward.

Why make another World Cup site?

Because a World Cup is not just a list of matches. A group finish changes the knockout path. A third-place qualifier can move the bracket. A date and venue matter when you are planning what to watch. A prediction is more fun when you can adjust it, come back to it, and share it without rebuilding the whole thing from scratch.

The missing piece was a place that lets a fan do what fans already do in their heads: check the schedule, imagine the group table, ask what happens next, and see the bracket take shape. When the existing sites did not quite fit that habit, this one was built in that direction.

The fan problem behind it

Before a World Cup, you want to play with scenarios. What if a favorite finishes second? What if a host nation gets a kinder path? Which third-place teams sneak through? Does one upset open a final route, or does it make the next round worse?

Existing pages often answer one slice of that question and leave the rest to memory, screenshots, spreadsheets, or extra browser tabs. This site is meant to reduce that mess: bracket first, schedule close by, group context visible, and fixture data handled carefully.

What this site tries to be

It tries to be a useful fan desk, not an official authority, bookmaker, broadcaster, or database pretending to know everything. The current data is treated as traceable reference data for teams, groups, dates, venues, and fixtures. If kickoff times are not available in the source data, the site should say that plainly instead of making them up.

The goal is simple: make the site feel like it was built by someone who actually watches the matches. Less clutter, fewer disconnected pages, and more tools that help a fan move from “what if?” to a complete World Cup prediction.