- How To Do Super Bowl Squares
- How Do You Play The Super Bowl Squares Challenge
- How Do You Play The Super Bowl Squares Game
- Super Bowl Squares Rules Easy
You're reading this article because you need to get your hands on a Super Bowl squares grid. In addition to the printable grid below, you'll also find tips and guides to other ways to bet on Super. How to determine a Winner playing Superbowl boxes or squares.
It’s fun and easy to play Super Squares®!
- Check Inpre-game for as many football games as you want, and make your 3 Predicters.
- React to and rate 2 Sponsor quizzes and ads.
- Square Up with a new Super Square every quarter.
Then, check the Game Group Leaderboards all game long – top scoring Game Group Winners are eligible for prizes and weekly!
NEW FEATURE — EARN BONUS POINTS. Look for the “React” Button after Kickoff to earn BONUS Points to climb your Game Group Leaderboard and win valuable Game Group Prizes. When it stops glowing, you’re done Reacting that game.
What Can I Win?
Super Squares® awards prizes every game show, funded in part by our Sponsors. Game Shows are in sync with major sporting events, often over a series of games, called a “Tournament.”
Every Game Show awards prizes to the top Game Group Winners in the country. And, during special tournaments, Game Group victories earn an entry to the Bigger Game® Game and a massive Grand Prize.
Past events have awarded tens of thousands of dollars, free prizes, and a brand new car. For details of past winners check the Winner’s Page,
How To Do Super Bowl Squares
OK, so you want to get in on the Super Bowl squares fun, but don’t know how to run a pool? Don’t you worry. We got you covered.
Super Bowl squares is a game of chance where people can purchase squares on a grid, each of which are assigned two numbers. Those numbers correspond to the box’s given value in the X and Y (or horizontal and vertical) coordinates.
This sounds more complicated than it is.
How to set up the Super Bowl squares grid
Make a square. Then carve that square up into 10 rows and 10 columns. (If you want a bigger squares pool, you can go up to 100 x 100 for a grid, but if you’re running that serious and massive a pool I doubt you’ll need me to explain to you how to run it.)
There are different ways to play, but usually the x-axis applies to one team, and the y-axis applies to the other team.
Participants can then purchase squares on the board. People don’t know what number they will be assigned; they’re just purchasing the chance to own a square, and can purchase as many as you want to limit.
In a 10×10 grid, obviously enough, there are 100 squares available to purchase. You can sell squares for as much or as little as you like, and limit people on how many they can purchase if you see fit.
Once names are assigned in random squares, you randomly assign numbers 1-10 to both the rows and columns. So it will look like this:
The names should be filled in the boxes, and you’re ready to go.
How do you score in Super Bowl squares?
Most people carve up scoring by quarter, half, and then final score. The pot can be carved up however you want. A popular way of doing it is 50% of the pot for final score, 30% for halftime score, and then 10% for 1st and 3rd quarter score, but it’s totally up to you. Some people just do 25% of pot after each of the four quarters.
The way you find a winner is whoever’s square correctly matches to the ones digit of the score of each team. So if the score after the first quarter is 14-10 Patriots, the player who has square that coincides with the 4 in the Patriots column and the 0 in the Rams column will win that quarter.
Each quarter gives you a fresh chance to win.
What are the best squares to have in Super Bowl squares?
I’m going to lean on my colleagues at USA TODAY Sports to handle this one:
How Do You Play The Super Bowl Squares Challenge
The Harvard Sports Analysis Collective wrote that the single best square to have is seven on the favorite’s axis (the Patriots are the favorites this year) and zero on the underdog’s, with the 0-0 square a close second. The Washington Post lists 0-0 as the best square to have, with the two combinations of seven and zero (7-0 or 0-7) right behind it. Three, four and one also aren’t bad numbers to have from an odds standpoint.
How Do You Play The Super Bowl Squares Game
Is there any skill in Super Bowl squares?
Super Bowl Squares Rules Easy
Zero. None. Total game of chance. Still fun to do!