The World Cup only comes around every four years, and if you are a football-loving dad like me, you know exactly how that feels. There is a particular kind of excitement in the weeks leading up to a tournament, and Hasbro has found a genuinely good way to extend it into the home. Their officially licensed FIFA World Cup 2026 collection is now available in Singapore at Toys’R’Us in-store and online, as well as at departmental stores island-wide, and it covers a range of games suitable for ages 8 and above, with two to six players.

I will be honest. When I first heard “FIFA Monopoly,” I assumed it would be a standard board with football-themed skins slapped over it. It is more interesting than that.
Monopoly Panini Prizm FIFA World Cup Board Game

The Monopoly Panini Prizm FIFA World Cup Board Game is priced at $59.99 and is the most involved of the four products in this collection. Instead of buying and trading properties in the usual Monopoly fashion, players build their dream football squad by selecting soccer stars through Panini cards before moving around the board to take control of FIFA World Cup historic matches.
The competitive element ramps up when players land on key matches and have to roll special dice while comparing stats on their Panini cards. Game Changer challenges add another layer, letting players boost their score at key moments. The highest scorer at the end wins.

What makes this version work is the Panini card mechanic. It introduces a collecting and trading element that gives the game a life outside of a single play session. If your kids are already into Panini sticker collections, this is an easy extension of that enthusiasm into a proper game format.
Monopoly Panini Prizm FIFA World Cup Trading Cards Booster Box
The Trading Cards Booster Box at $39.99 expands the card experience further. Each box contains 24 collectible Monopoly Panini Prizm FIFA cards, with randomly inserted Panini Prizm parallels and ultra-rare cards distributed throughout. The cards work both as standalone collectibles and as playable components within the board game.

For families who enjoy the trading card hobby, this box functions as both a standalone purchase and a way to build a stronger hand for the board game. Getting a Prizm parallel or an ultra-rare card from a pack is the kind of moment that tends to generate genuine excitement at the table, regardless of age.
Connect 4 Shots FIFA World Cup 2026 Board Game
This one is the most purely physical of the four and probably the one most likely to get the whole room involved at a World Cup watch party. Connect 4 Shots FIFA World Cup 2026 is priced at $39.99 and puts two players or teams head to head to score four shots in a row.

The twist here is the launcher mechanic. Instead of dropping pieces from above, players use football-inspired cleat launchers to simultaneously kick balls into the grid once the countdown hits “3-2-1-BOOM.” Both players fire at the same time, which keeps the pace fast and the tension high. The first to line up four of the same colour wins.

It stores all its pieces inside the unit, so it travels easily and sets up quickly, which makes it genuinely practical for family gatherings rather than sitting on a shelf between uses. For younger children who find the strategy of the Monopoly version a bit much, this is the right entry point.
Monopoly Deal FIFA World Cup 2026 Edition Card Game

The Monopoly Deal FIFA World Cup 2026 Edition at $14.99 is the most accessible of the four, both in terms of price and complexity. It is a card game where players race to collect three player sets in different colours. The catch is the Action cards, which can completely change the momentum of the game at any point, letting players score goals, double their lead, or steal cards from opponents just before they win.

For a family game night with mixed ages, this is the one to start with. It plays quickly, teaches fast, and the Action card chaos means the outcome stays unpredictable until the very end. At $14.99, it is also an easy gift for a football-loving friend or relative who does not necessarily want a full board game.
Which One Should You Get
If you want the most complete experience and your family enjoys proper board game sessions, the Monopoly Panini Prizm at $59.99 is the headline product. Add the Booster Box at $39.99 if you want the card-collecting element to develop over time.
If you need something faster and more physical for a group, Connect 4 Shots at $39.99 is the one to grab. And if budget is the priority or you simply want a fun filler game to keep things lively during half-time, the Monopoly Deal card game at $14.99 earns its place at the table.
The World Cup does not come around often. Having a game or two ready for when the matches start is not a bad idea at all.
Which of these would you pick up first? Drop a comment and let me know.