🏈Super Bowl Watch Party: 30 Polls to Run During the Game
Super Bowl Sunday is a four-hour event with three hours of dead air between actual football. Drop moomz polls in the watch party group chat at each commercial break. The non-fans get something to participate in, the actual football fans get to flex their predictions, and by halftime everyone's invested. Way better than just yelling at the TV.
Pre-game prediction polls
An hour before kickoff, run a quick prediction round in the group chat. Final score range, first scoring play (touchdown, field goal, safety, turnover), coin toss winner, opening kickoff returner. Five fast polls, two minutes each. Now everyone has stakes in the first quarter, even the friend who thinks football is "boring." When the kickoff happens, half your friends will be screaming because they bet on the wrong outcome via free polls. Costs nothing, no actual gambling, but the dopamine pattern is identical.
Halftime show takes
Halftime show is its own event. The poll round before, during and after halftime is some of the highest-engagement content of the whole night. "Will the headliner bring a surprise guest?", "rate the wardrobe 1-5", "best song they performed", "did it slap or flop?". The morning-after takes go viral on Twitter and TikTok, and your watch party will be ahead of the curve because you already aggregated the room's opinion in real time. Pre-write three polls per minute of halftime so you're ready when the moment hits.
Commercial ranking polls
The non-football contingent of any Super Bowl party watches for the commercials. Run a poll after each commercial break with the three best ads from that break as options. By the end of the game you'll have a Top 10 commercial leaderboard that your friend group voted on live. The next morning, everyone reshares the result instead of arguing with strangers on Twitter about whether the Doritos ad was funny. It's a clean way to convert passive TV-watching into a group activity.
MVP and overtime polls
By the fourth quarter the watch party is invested. Run an MVP prediction poll with five player options. Then if the game goes to overtime, run a "who scores first?" poll. The polls amplify the tension of the closing minutes way more than just sitting and watching. After the final whistle, run a "best moment of the night" recap poll to send everyone home with shared lore. Some watch parties make it tradition — the group chat owns a Super Bowl prediction history going back five years, and they roast the friend with the worst prediction record.
Ready-to-launch poll prompts
- 1Final score winner?AFC team 🦅NFC team 🐺OT thriller 🏆BlowoutLaunch this poll
- 2First scoring play?Touchdown 🏈Field goal 🥅Safety 🛡️Defensive TD ⚡Launch this poll
- 3Halftime show rating?Slap 🔥Mid 😐Flop 💀Iconic legendary 🌟Launch this poll
- 4Best commercial brand?Doritos 🌽Budweiser 🍺Apple 🍎New tech startup 🚀Launch this poll
- 5Halftime surprise guest?Yes 🎤NoMultiple guests 🎪Drake somehow 🦉Launch this poll
- 6MVP guess?QB winner 🏈Running back 💨WR with big game 🙌Defensive player 🛡️Launch this poll
- 7Wings or pizza?Wings 🍗Pizza 🍕Both 🤤Just chips 🥨Launch this poll
- 8Anthem length over/under 2 min?Over ⏰Under ⏱️Exactly 2 🎯Skipped 🎤Launch this poll
- 9Game energy by Q3?Blowout 😴Close game 🔥Comeback narrative 📈Defense battle 🛡️Launch this poll
- 10Where you watching?Friend's house 🏠Sports bar 🍻Solo couch 🛋️Big home theater 📺Launch this poll
Frequently asked
Q.What polls work best at a Super Bowl watch party?+
Prediction polls before kickoff (final score, first scoring play, MVP guess) give the night a story arc. Halftime show polls get the non-fans engaged. Commercial ranking polls keep everyone watching the ads. Recap polls after the game lock in shared memories. Mix the football-heavy polls (for fans) with vibe polls (for everyone) so nobody feels excluded. Don't go too sports-deep — half the room doesn't know what a Cover 2 is.
Q.How can I include friends who don't watch football?+
Lean into the commercial polls, the halftime polls, and the food polls. A solid Super Bowl watch party should have 60% football polls and 40% vibe polls. Mention the non-fans in the chat with a quick "the next poll is for the haters of sports" so they know they're invited. Once they've voted on three commercials, they're locked into the night and will start half-watching the actual game by the third quarter. It works every time.
Q.When during the game should I post each poll?+
Pre-kickoff for predictions. Quarter 1 lull for snack polls. Halftime entry for halftime show predictions. Halftime exit for halftime show ratings. Quarter 3 for MVP refinement. Quarter 4 for clutch moment predictions. Post-game for recap and best moment. Spread them out so they don't pile up. Pre-write everything during the pregame show so you're not typing during a touchdown drive.
Q.Can I run a Super Bowl poll with friends not at the party?+
Yes — share the moomz link in any group chat or social. Remote friends watching from their own couches can vote alongside the in-person room. Some moomz Super Bowl polls have gotten thousands of votes from strangers across the US when shared publicly. The leaderboard becomes a fun side-game. Just be aware that on a public poll, anyone can vote, so the result is broader than just your friend group.
Q.Is moomz good for sports betting watch parties?+
moomz is not a real-money betting product, but it works perfectly as a free-stakes prediction game between friends. Some watch parties use moomz alongside a small Venmo prediction pool: whoever has the most accurate moomz predictions across the night collects the pot. That's a fun gamification layer that costs nothing to set up and turns the night into a competition. Always check your local laws if real money is involved.
Related reads
Also read
More in this category
Explore by theme
One tap creates the poll with your question — edit if you want.