FAR — Fan Assisted Refereeing
FAR — Fan Assisted Refereeing

About FAR

When VAR checks, the world votes.

Why FAR exists

Video Assistant Refereeing was meant to make football fairer — but plenty of calls still split stadiums, pundits, and timelines. For years fans could do nothing but only shout at the screen. FAR — Fan Assisted Refereeing gives that energy a voice: a live, collective verdict when VAR is in play.

The idea is simple: when VAR happens, FAR happens too. Same moment, same incident — but now the crowd weighs in with a structured vote while the review is still fresh. The Fan decision may not influence the VAR verdict but atleast we will know what the world thinks.

How it works

From trigger to verdict — built for match-day speed

Step 1

VAR happens on the pitch

When the referee sends a decision to the monitor, millions of fans already have an opinion — whether they agree or disagree with the final call.

Step 2

FAR happens in the stands

Fans in the match room trigger FAR together. They decide whether they want to vote on the incident or not. When enough of the crowd agrees a FAR should be started, voting opens automatically.

Step 3

You vote in 30 seconds

Large buttons, live percentages, and zero friction. Penalty? Offside? Red card? Cast your verdict before the window closes.

Step 4

Compare fan vs official

When the real decision lands, FAR shows the fan verdict beside the official call — plus a controversy score when the world splits.

What you get

Crowd-triggered rooms

FAR opens when fans agree a VAR moment is live — not before, not after.

Bias-aware splits

See how countries and favorite teams voted when opinions diverge.

Free to join. Vote live during World Cup matches and beyond.

By joining you agree to our Terms & Conditions.