Football Bingo
4 by 4 mixed board with clubs, leagues, nationalities, trophies and more.
How to play
The Football Kit Quiz shows you a club's shirt — its colours, stripes, hoops or sash — and asks you to name the club. There are no badges or names on the shirt, so you are reading the kit itself: the base colour, the pattern and the trim. Each session runs for ten rounds, with suggestions as you type and hints when a design has you stumped.
4 by 4 mixed board with clubs, leagues, nationalities, trophies and more.
You type the club's name and the game offers matching suggestions to help you land on the right spelling. If a kit is tricky you can reveal a hint or pass the round. The goal is to clear all ten rounds for the top score, so it pays to commit to a confident answer and save hints for the shirts that genuinely could belong to several clubs.
Study the base colour first, then the pattern — stripes, hoops, halves or a plain shirt. Note the trim and secondary colour, which often separate two clubs that share a main colour. Type the club name and pick from the suggestions to get the spelling right. If two clubs share the look, reveal a hint or pass rather than guessing blindly. Clear all ten rounds, tightening your reads as the session goes on.
Use the pattern to break colour ties: claret and blue could be Aston Villa, West Ham or Burnley, but the layout of the two colours tells them apart. Red-and-white stripes are shared by many clubs, so lean on the shade of red and the trim to decide between the likes of Athletic Bilbao, Southampton and River Plate. Vertical stripes, horizontal hoops and a diagonal sash are strong signatures — identify the pattern family before you guess the club. Watch for iconic one-off details like a distinctive collar or sponsor-free retro cut that pin a shirt to a specific era and club. Save your hint for the genuinely ambiguous kits and answer the obvious ones outright to protect your score.
You identify the club from its shirt alone — the colours, pattern and trim — with no badge or name shown. Each round is a new kit, and you name the club it belongs to.
A session is ten rounds. Clearing all ten with the fewest hints gives you the top score, so confident answers on the easy kits leave you room to think on the hard ones.
That is where the pattern and trim matter. Claret-and-blue or red-and-white striped shirts are shared by several clubs, so the layout of the colours and the secondary details separate them — and you can use a hint if you are truly torn.
Yes. As you type, the game suggests matching club names, so you can pick the correct spelling rather than typing the full name perfectly yourself.