Confession time. When a friend told me she’d watched a World Cup group match “from pitch level” without leaving Dallas, I assumed she’d had one too many stadium lagers. Then she showed me the video. She was sitting in a venue called Cosm, under an 87-foot wraparound LED dome, and the camera angle genuinely looked like she was standing on the touchline. No headset. No fiddly VR straps. Just a room full of people losing their minds together as the goal went in.
So with the 2026 knockout rounds arriving this week, I did what any football-adjacent person with FOMO would do. I dug into how it works, what it costs, and whether it’s actually worth booking. Short answer? Yes, with one caveat I’ll get to. If you want to browse while you read, the Cosm World Cup schedule is here.
What exactly is Shared Reality?
Cosm calls it Shared Reality, which sounds like marketing speak until you’re under the thing. Picture a dome the height of an eight-storey building, wrapped in 12K LED, curving over and around your seat so the match fills your entire field of vision. Fox Sports has teamed up with Cosm and FIFA to deliver World Cup 2026 matches this way at the venues in Los Angeles, Dallas and Atlanta, with dedicated camera feeds shot for the dome. That’s the part that surprised me – it’s not a big telly. It’s its own broadcast.

And the crowd matters. This isn’t a polite cinema screening where someone shushes you for celebrating. The seating is social by design – built for eating, talking and jumping out of your seat. Add a full bar and food delivered right to where you’re sitting, and you start to see why people compare it to the best seats in a stadium that happens to serve proper cocktails. Have a look at what’s showing this week and you’ll see how packed the calendar is.
The knockout matches to circle
The Round of 16 is where this gets fun. Cosm is screening a run of knockout fixtures across early July, and the first week is a genuinely spicy lineup:
Round of 16 at Cosm – the opening days
July 5 – Brazil v Norway, then Mexico v England later that day
July 6 – USA v Belgium (expect this one to sell out fast)
July 7 – Switzerland v Colombia
Mexico v England is the one I’d fight for, personally. A knockout match, a proper rivalry-in-the-making, and a dome full of split loyalties? That’s the kind of atmosphere you can’t manufacture at home with a soundbar. The match listings show times for each venue, and tickets are per-match, so you can build your own little tournament run.

Which venue, and what to book
Three venues are running World Cup fixtures. Los Angeles sits at Hollywood Park in Inglewood, right next to SoFi Stadium. Dallas is at Grandscape in The Colony, one of the biggest retail and entertainment districts in the country. And Atlanta – the newest – just opened at Centennial Yards in June. Each has the same three spaces: The Dome for the full immersive experience, The Hall for a two-storey sports-bar vibe with wall-to-wall screens, and The Deck outside for fresh air between matches.
My advice, from everyone I grilled about this: pay for reserved Dome seating. The unreserved standing tickets are cheaper and totally fine for a casual look, but for a knockout match you want a guaranteed seat under the dome, not a spot craning your neck from The Hall. Adidas is the official venue sponsor for the World Cup events, so expect the whole place to be properly dressed for it. Check seat options for your match here.

The honest verdict
Is it as good as being at the tournament? No, and I won’t pretend otherwise – nothing replaces actually being there when your team scores. But here’s the thing. Most of us were never getting to those matches anyway. Flights, match tickets, accommodation – a World Cup trip costs more than my first car. For the price of a nice dinner, Cosm gets you 90 percent of the atmosphere with better food, a real bar, and a camera angle the people in the stadium would envy.
The one flaw? Popular matches genuinely do sell out, and the good reserved seats go first. So if USA v Belgium or Mexico v England is calling your name, don’t do the thing where you think about it for a week. Grab your World Cup seats at Cosm while the picking is still good.
