KSI showed up to the 2026 FIFA World Cup the only way he knows how: loud and all in.
The British creator, boxer, and musician posted on Instagram confirming his attendance and tagging fellow creator IShowSpeed in the caption. He credited Lynx directly for making the trip happen. The caption kept it short: “VIVA ESPANA!!! @ishowspeed – Thank you @lynx for the tickets. #fifaworldcup.”
No mystery about where his loyalties lie.
Lynx, the UK counterpart to the Axe brand, has been investing in creator partnerships for years. Sending KSI to the biggest football tournament on the planet is a different kind of brand move from a standard sponsored photo. Creator placements at live events have become one of the smarter plays in sports marketing. The right face in the right seat generates coverage that paid media struggles to match. Lynx clearly understood what it was doing. The post earned more than 215,000 likes on Instagram. That reflects the combined pull of both creators appearing in a single caption.
IShowSpeed’s tag is the buried headline. Darren Watkins Jr. goes by Speed online. He’s built his entire brand around being football’s most passionate superfan. His World Cup reactions have become cultural moments of their own. Speed turns up to a match and the internet pays attention. The idea of Speed and KSI together at a Spain fixture? That’s content history in the making.
KSI, born Olajide Olatunji in Watford, England, has spent the better part of 15 years turning online fame into something far larger. Albums. Pay-per-view boxing nights. Sold-out arenas. A fast-food chain. Each move bigger than the last.
Football has always been part of KSI’s world. He grew up in England on the sport. His early YouTube career was built on FIFA gaming content. The boxing and the music came later. Getting a seat at the actual tournament, courtesy of a brand deal, feels full circle.
“VIVA ESPANA” makes the allegiance plain. Spain has been one of the most exciting teams in this summer’s tournament. Getting swept up in that atmosphere is easy, and KSI clearly let it happen.
Neither creator has confirmed filming during the trip. But KSI’s career is built on capturing the moments that matter. Speed’s whole appeal is the unfiltered reaction, raw and immediate. Both creators have built their entire brands on not missing moments like this. The odds of this trip going undocumented are slim.
Content from the trip could still surface. A vlog, a proper reaction video, a full World Cup diary: any of it would land on channels with a global combined audience. For now, the Instagram post says everything it needs to. KSI was there. Speed was with him. Lynx made it happen. And somewhere in that stadium, two of the internet’s biggest voices were screaming for Spain.




















