Céline Dept posted a World Cup footballer-naming trivia challenge on Instagram today, and it turned into one of her bigger moments on the platform.
Her caption read “Who can name a World Cup footballer first? (wait for the last one..)” with a laughing emoji to close it out. It’s a simple setup – watch the sequence, name the players before the reveal. But that teased ending added something that clearly got people interested.
The “wait for the last one” line is the real hook. It signals something unexpected at the end of the lineup. The final footballer could be a wildcard nobody saw coming, or someone so unexpected that the laughing emoji suddenly makes perfect sense. Whatever it is, the promise alone is enough to keep you watching.
The response backed that up. The post collected 348,821 likes, a genuinely strong number for lifestyle creator content crossing into sports territory. For a non-sports creator, hitting that kind of traction on a tournament-adjacent post is not the norm. The total engagement score hit 354,056, pointing to a lively comment section running alongside those likes. Followers were almost certainly racing to name each player and competing to catch the final surprise before it landed.
The timing is hard to separate from the numbers. The 2026 FIFA World Cup – hosted this year across the United States, Canada, and Mexico – has been the dominant cultural moment of the summer. Matches have driven massive global viewership week after week. They’ve also pushed football into lifestyle, fashion, and entertainment conversations in a big way. Creators from every corner of social media have been looking for their angle, and sporting trivia formats have become one of the cleaner ways to join in. You don’t need deep tactical knowledge to play a name game.
Dept’s version fits that space well. The challenge format keeps things interactive. It rewards people who know their footballers and gives casual fans a reason to stay curious. Short-form trivia works across almost every platform right now. It doesn’t demand a lot from the viewer, but it gives them just enough to feel involved. Adding a teased finale on top of that turns a quick scroll into something with a real payoff at the end.
She hasn’t followed up with any hint about who the final footballer is. The mystery holds for anyone coming to the post today. Given the size of the response, a lot of her audience already knows the answer. But the clip will keep circulating. The teased ending makes it easy to pass on to friends.
The World Cup is one of those events that pulls creators in regardless of their usual content territory. Sports, entertainment, lifestyle – it blurs the lines in a way that few other moments do. Dept found a good spot in all of that today. Nearly 350,000 likes says the challenge landed, and the teased ending gave it a bit more life than a straight trivia post would have had.
