Footy Bingo
4 by 4 mixed board with clubs, leagues, nationalities, trophies and more.
FootyMark
Play quick football quizzes, grids, lineups and ranking games. Free to start, no sign-up, and fresh daily boards.
4 by 4 mixed board with clubs, leagues, nationalities, trophies and more.
Football team colors quiz
Guess the Kit is a football team colors quiz where every round shows a simplified home-kit identity. There are no logos, badges or player photos: you read the shirt colors, pattern and hints, then type the club name. It is built for fans searching for football team colors, kit color quizzes and club shirt pattern challenges.
Guess the Kit turns classic football shirt identities into a quick guessing game. Instead of showing official logos or photos, each round uses colors and layout patterns such as vertical stripes, hoops, sleeves, halves, a sash, a chest band or a central stripe. The aim is to recognize the club from its visual football identity, not from a badge.
Many football clubs share broad color families, so the game treats pattern and context as part of the clue. Claret and blue can point toward Aston Villa, West Ham or Trabzonspor; black and white stripes can suggest Juventus or Newcastle; red and white can mean Arsenal sleeves, Atletico stripes, Ajax's central stripe or River Plate's sash. Autocomplete and hints keep those overlaps fair.
The colors are simplified visual approximations for quiz play, not official season-by-season manufacturer specifications. Football kit shades change by manufacturer, material, lighting and season, so the dataset focuses on recognizable home-kit identities: red and black stripes for AC Milan, yellow and navy stripes for Fenerbahce, blue and garnet for Barcelona, or green and white hoops for Celtic.
No. The HEX values are simplified approximations for quiz play and visual recognition. Exact kit shades can change by season, manufacturer, fabric and lighting, so the game focuses on recognizable color identity rather than official specifications.
Yes. Many clubs share similar color families. The game uses the shirt pattern, autocomplete and optional hints to distinguish clubs that look close, such as Aston Villa, West Ham and Trabzonspor or Juventus and Newcastle.
A fair clue needs more than a color pair. Guess the Kit shows country and league context from the start, then combines color family, visual pattern and accepted club aliases so the answer is not decided by an overly generic red, blue or white block.
The first version focuses on recognizable home-kit identities. Away and third kits change more often, so they should be added only when the dataset is large and curated enough to stay fair.