West Africa / Atlantic Islands
Cape Verde
An island team can turn a match result into searches for volcanoes, beaches, music, and Atlantic routes.
World Cup countries, told as travel stories
A visual guide to the landscapes, players, cultures, and routes behind the national teams people suddenly start searching for.
Explore countriesFeatured team countries
Start with the countries where football curiosity can become a real trip: geography, players, landscapes, routes, and cultural context.
West Africa / Atlantic Islands
An island team can turn a match result into searches for volcanoes, beaches, music, and Atlantic routes.
Caribbean
A Caribbean football story with Dutch routes, pastel streets, and reef-blue travel intent.
Central Asia
A first-time World Cup story can introduce travelers to Silk Road cities, blue tiles, and desert rail routes.
Middle East
Football curiosity can become a route through Petra, Wadi Rum, Amman, and Dead Sea travel planning.
Caribbean
A football search can open a Caribbean story of mountain citadels, music, art, and diaspora routes.
Central Africa
The Leopards can connect football curiosity with volcanoes, rainforests, river cities, and Congolese music.
Middle East
A football route through Mesopotamia can introduce ancient cities, marshlands, shrines, and modern Baghdad.
Gulf / Middle East
A familiar tournament host can still convert football interest into desert, skyline, souq, and stopover travel.
Western Europe / Low Countries
Orange football turns canals, bikes, museums, and compact Dutch train routes into an easy first European trip.
Central Europe / Alps
Swiss football curiosity becomes a rail route through lakes, alpine peaks, multilingual cities, and precise travel planning.
North Africa / Maghreb
The Atlas Lions open a route through medinas, Atlantic wind, mountain passes, and Sahara dunes.
Southern Africa
Bafana Bafana turns a World Cup host's memory into Cape Town, Soweto, Kruger, wine country, and football streets.
East Asia
Samurai Blue turns football curiosity into Tokyo nights, Kyoto temples, bullet trains, and precision travel planning.
West Africa
The Lions of Teranga can open a route through Dakar, Goree Island, pink lakes, Saint-Louis, music, and Atlantic football culture.
East Asia
The Taegeuk Warriors turn football attention into Seoul, Busan, Jeju, Gyeongju, and a precise rail-led Korea trip.
West Africa
Les Elephants carry a route through Abidjan, Grand-Bassam, Yamoussoukro, cocoa country, and Gulf of Guinea football culture.
Northern Europe
Norway turns World Cup curiosity into fjords, railways, Arctic light, and the football map behind Haaland and Odegaard.
East Africa
The Cranes can turn East African football curiosity into gorilla trekking, the Nile, savanna drives, and Kampala match nights.
Why this World Cup travel project exists
A personal note from a thirty-year football fan and restless traveler.

I have been a football fan for thirty years, which means the World Cup has measured my life in a strange and faithful rhythm. I remember tournaments by the room where I watched them, by the friends who shouted beside me, by the late-night food on the table, by the names that suddenly became part of ordinary conversation. I have also spent much of my adult life chasing the opposite feeling: leaving home, buying a ticket with room for uncertainty, walking through a city before I understand its streets, and letting a country teach me its pace. Travel the Teams began where those two old loves met. It began with the World Cup on a screen, a notebook open beside me, and the sense that every unfamiliar flag was not only a football story but a doorway.
Most years, I travel for nearly two months. I do not travel like someone checking boxes. I like the loose days: a bus station at sunrise, a market where I cannot read every sign, a road that turns from city dust to mountain light, a small restaurant where the menu is explained with hands, smiles, and the one shared word everyone understands. Nature pulls me first, then society, then people. I love coastlines, deserts, rivers, volcanic hills, old towns, music, tea, bread, and the quiet drama of daily life. I like to feel how a place lives when nobody is performing for me. This year, the World Cup kept me at home. I thought I was only staying in to watch football. Instead, I found myself traveling in a different way.
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