Joshua Moses,
As a football fan, it’s been impossible to miss.
Beckham. Zidane. Ronaldinho. Henry.
Legends of the late 90s and early 2000s suddenly back at the centre of World Cup 2026.
Adidas brought together (albeit de-aged by AI) Beckham, Zidane and Del Piero in Backyard Legends. McDonald’s reunited football icons. Retro kits are everywhere. Total 90 is back. Predator is back.
The past is everywhere.
Then again, perhaps that’s nothing new.
The World Cup has always been nostalgic.
Every tournament arrives carrying the weight of the ones before it.
Pele.
Maradona.
Gazza’s tears.
Ronaldo’s dodgy trim.
Zidane’s headbutt.
Even this year feels oddly nostalgic for me, as Messi and Ronaldo play in their last World Cup. (Although at this rate, maybe not.)
Part of the magic is that every generation experiences the tournament differently while sharing the same mythology.
Maybe that’s why so many brands instinctively looked backwards this summer.
And to be fair, there are good reasons they do.
Back in 2023, Kantar found fewer than 3% of ads contained nostalgic elements despite nostalgia being one of advertising’s most effective emotional devices, boosting enjoyability and emotional connection. It looked like an opportunity hiding in plain sight.
Behavioural science gives us a clue why.
Richard Shotton describes a “nostalgia bias”. We don’t just remember the past fondly. We tend to overvalue it.
Familiar things feel safer.
More trustworthy.
More comfortable.
What feels like a longing for the past may simply be a preference for what we already know.
And in a world that can feel increasingly uncertain, that’s a pretty powerful thing.
For marketers, that’s where things get interesting. Nostalgia works. But if every brand is reaching for the same memories, what happens to distinctiveness?