Key Takeaways
- Coinbase returned with a fun Backstreet Boys karaoke ad after a 4-year break.
- Crypto ads were minimal as AI dominated the 2026 “AI Bowl” commercial lineup.
- 2022’s heavy crypto ads preceded a brutal bear market, reigniting jinx fears.
After disappearing from the biggest advertising stage in the United States for three straight years, crypto brands made a quiet return during the 2026 Super Bowl at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara.
There was no blitz, no celebrity overload, and none of the chest-thumping optimism that defined the infamous “Crypto Bowl” of 2022.
Instead, crypto showed up cautiously, sharing space in a broadcast dominated by artificial intelligence.
With AI-themed commercials from OpenAI, Anthropic, Meta, Google, and Amazon filling much of the ad inventory.
Super Bowl LX quickly earned the nickname “the AI Bowl.”
Against that backdrop, crypto’s limited presence felt deliberate — restrained rather than absent.
ChangeNow
Bitunix
Bitget
Crypto’s Comeback Was Small, but Noticeable
Compared to 2022, crypto ads were few, but they didn’t go unnoticed.
While tech spending overall was far higher than four years ago, crypto brands largely stayed on the sidelines.
Of the 66 national ads aired during the game, 15 promoted AI companies or AI-powered products.
That imbalance told its own story. Crypto wasn’t trying to sell the future this time. It was trying to remind people it still exists.
Coinbase Tries a Softer Touch
The most visible crypto return came from Coinbase, which aired its first Super Bowl ad since 2022.
The 60-second spot, titled “Everybody Coinbase,” ditched technical jargon entirely and leaned into nostalgia instead.
For most of the ad, viewers saw a low-resolution karaoke screen playing the lyrics to the Backstreet Boys’ 1997 hit “Everybody (Backstreet’s Back).”
The visuals were intentionally simple — blocky fonts, PowerPoint-style transitions, and neon effects that looked straight out of the early 2000s.
Only near the end did the Coinbase logo appear, alongside the tagline: “Crypto. For everybody.”
It was a sharp contrast to Coinbase’s 2022 QR-code stunt, which drove so much traffic that it crashed the company’s app.
This time, there was no call to action, no urgency. Just a broad, almost nostalgic reminder that crypto isn’t just for insiders anymore.
When AI and Crypto Start to Blur
Another moment that sparked conversation came from AI.com, a platform founded by Crypto.com CEO Kris Marszalek.
The company ran a 30-second fourth-quarter ad encouraging viewers to create AI handles.
Interestingly, the pitch sent traffic surging and briefly knocked the site offline.
Marszalek later acknowledged the spike on X , calling the traffic levels “insane.”
While the ad positioned itself as AI-first, its leadership and branding ties to Crypto.com blurred the line between the two sectors, feeding into a broader narrative: crypto is re-emerging, but often under the AI banner.
Trump Crypto Donations?
Crypto also surfaced in more unconventional — and controversial — ways.
A fake Fox pre-game segment aired an AI-generated video depicting President Donald Trump soliciting crypto donations and claiming he would “double your money.”
The clip quickly spread online, drawing sharp backlash from viewers who flagged it as misleading.
Soon after, the video was widely labeled a scam, with critics warning that the promise mirrored common crypto fraud tactics.
There was no indication the message was authentic or endorsed, and the segment fueled broader concerns about AI-generated political content and financial deception during high-profile broadcasts.
Prediction Markets
Prediction markets leaned into Super Bowl hype from a different angle.
Platforms such as Kalshi, Polymarket, and Coinbase offered odds on which brands would run Super Bowl ads.
Coinbase entered as a heavy favorite, listed at 70.3% odds — suggesting its return to the spotlight was widely anticipated rather than speculative.
Why 2022 Still Looms Large
Any crypto appearance at the Super Bowl inevitably brings up memories of 2022 — and not in a good way.
That year’s Super Bowl LVI in Inglewood, California featured a full-on crypto advertising blitz.
Coinbase, FTX, Crypto.com, and eToro spent a combined estimated $54 million, with 30-second ad slots priced around $6.5–7 million.
Bitcoin (BTC) was trading near $42,000, and the total crypto market cap had topped $2 trillion.
The ads were everywhere, packed with buzzwords and bold promises.
They reached nearly 99 million viewers and drove massive sign-ups. In hindsight, they also marked the top.
Within months, the market unraveled. Bitcoin dropped roughly 65% in 2022, bottoming near $16,000 by November.
FTX — one of the most prominent Super Bowl advertisers — collapsed amid fraud allegations, bankruptcy filings, and the arrest of founder Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF).
The fallout wiped out close to $2 trillion in market value and sent shockwaves through the industry.
Crypto ads vanished from Super Bowls between 2023 and 2025 as companies cut costs, laid off staff, and shifted focus from retail hype to survival.
The Super Bowl “Jinx” Isn’t Forgotten
Those events cemented the idea of a “Super Bowl jinx” — the belief that heavily advertised sectors are often near a market peak.
Crypto isn’t the first industry to earn that reputation.
The 2000 “Dot-Com Bowl” featured 17 internet startups, many of which collapsed soon after.
Mortgage lenders dominated mid-2000s broadcasts, just ahead of the 2008 financial crisis.
By 2023, Fox executives confirmed there was “zero representation” from crypto advertisers.
Planned ads were pulled after FTX’s collapse, and the category stayed dark for three consecutive Super Bowls.
By then, crypto’s center of gravity had shifted toward Wall Street and institutional adoption, reducing the need — and appetite — for splashy mass-market ads.
A Different Kind of Return
Super Bowl ad prices in 2026 reached $8–10 million for 30-second slots, with some placements going even higher.
NBC sold out its inventory, including streaming-only ads on Peacock. Crypto brands could have gone bigger — but chose not to.
That restraint is what made this year feel different.
Rather than signaling a new hype cycle, crypto’s return looked more like a cautious reintroduction.
The industry showed up, said hello, and avoided making promises it might regret later.
Whether that’s a sign of maturity — or just learned caution — is still an open question.
But one thing is clear: crypto didn’t come back to the Super Bowl to steal the spotlight this time.























































































































































































































































