Arthur Blank’s Atlanta World Cup footprint now stretches beyond Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Atlanta Magazine listed 12 restaurants and bars where fans can watch FIFA World Cup matches, giving Atlanta supporters a citywide set of game-day options instead of one central gathering point.
12 restaurants and bars made the list, and the roundup leans on Atlanta United’s official partner pubs. For readers, that means the watch-party map is built around places already set up for big soccer nights, with TVs, drinks, and matchday crowds already in place.
Brewhouse Cafe appears twice in the city, with locations in Little Five Points and South Downtown. It was voted America’s Best Soccer Bar by Men in Blazers, and it offers indoor and outdoor TVs plus giveaways that include tickets, jerseys, scarves, and coozies.
Fado Irish Pub adds a triple-level modern pub with a patio bar in Buckhead Village District, plus a smaller sister location in Midtown. Willie B’s is inside Silverbacks Park in Doraville, where the menu includes Flaming Mac and Cheese, Gorilla’d Cheese, street tacos, and 14 beers on tap.
Decatur Square to Chamblee
O’Sullivans Irish Pub sits right off Decatur Square green and lists more than 350 whiskey offerings. The Tavern is in The Battery Atlanta next to Truist Park, and it gives away official team jerseys during Atlanta United games.
Chamblee Tap & Market brings 30 rotating craft beers and wines on tap in downtown Chamblee, among restaurants and antique stores. Atlanta United street-team members often make appearances there just before kickoff, which gives the venue a built-in pregame rhythm that the other spots do not match in the same way.
Der Biergarten rounds out the list as a German beer garden downtown. The complication is simple: the article says matchday energy is not confined to Mercedes-Benz Stadium, yet the venues it highlights are part of Atlanta United’s official partner network, so the citywide spread comes with a controlled list of places rather than an open-ended bar crawl.
The full set of 12 stops matters because the excerpt cuts off before every venue is named. Fans who want the complete route will need the finished list, but the places already visible show the pattern: Atlanta United has turned soccer viewing into a neighborhood-by-neighborhood proposition, with official bars, beer lists, and giveaway-heavy nights doing the work that one stadium alone cannot.







