Every four years the world rearranges itself around ninety-minute windows. Restaurants reprint their hours. Strangers become a section. And somewhere in every city, someone is trying to organise a watch party from a group chat that has already lost track of who is coming.
We think that someone deserves a real page. Not a calendar invite. Not a flyer made in a slide deck at midnight. A site — with a hero, a fixture list, a map, an RSVP — that looks like the event actually matters. Because it does.
So we built three. Today UOVA ships a trio of templates made for the summer of football: one for the watch party, one for the fan zone or pop-up, and one for the brand running a campaign around the tournament. Each is a complete site, not a landing page. Each is designed to be on a phone screen within minutes, not hours.
Designed for the moment, not the deadline
The hardest part of an event site has never been the building. It is the staring. The blank canvas, the where-do-I-start, the slow realisation that you are now a part-time art director with a full-time job. UOVA removes the staring. You describe the match — the teams, the time, the place, the vibe — and a finished, on-brand site arrives ready to edit.
These three are tuned for exactly that. Floodlit hero imagery. A countdown that reads the kickoff. A fixtures block that holds a group stage without breaking a sweat. A guest list that actually counts heads. The kind of thing that used to take an agency a week, sitting in front of you, yours to change.
An event is a promise that something will happen. The page is where you keep it.
Three templates, one tournament
The first, built for watch parties, leads with the screen and the seat: where to be, when to arrive, who else is coming. The second, for fan zones and pop-ups, scales to a venue — multiple screens, food, hours across a month of fixtures. The third is for the brands: a campaign spine that holds a hero film, a mechanic, and a way to capture everyone who shows up.
All three speak the same language as the rest of UOVA. Real typography. Real motion. Imagery that looks photographed, not pulled from a stock bin. The point was never to make football sites that look like football sites. It was to make football sites that look like they were designed.
Kickoff is closer than your group chat thinks
The opening match is days away. The watch party is going to happen with or without a page. The only question is whether the people you want there can find it, remember it, and bring someone. A good site does all three. A great one does it in a way that makes the night feel like an occasion before it has even started.
Pick a template. Describe the match. Publish before the kettle boils. Then send the link and let the section assemble itself.




