Whether your country is playing in Brazil this year or not, joining in the fun of this monthlong global festivity is hard to resist. Thanks to bloggers and photographers on the ground in Brazil and around the world, we all get to have the best views.
Just before their team dispatched the outgoing champion, Spain, these Chilean fans found time to hit the beach in Copacabana, where they were captured by Rio-based photoblogger Cristina.
Across town, in a favela called Acari, Dutch student Steef Fleur watched the Brazil-Mexico match with some new friends. This photo is part of Steef's ongoing project to document the World Cup across local communities in Brazil.
Fans on the other side of the equator watched the same game between the Mexican and Brazilian teams. Blogger Vonn Scott Bair joined the action in San Francisco's Civic Center, where football fanatics and lunch breakers alike can watch the games together.
Of course, not only humans enjoy a good game of soccer; Zeke, David Kanigan's four-legged friend, was just as ready for the fun to start on June 12, when the first match took place.
All this excitement invites intensive, nonstop coverage. British photographer Simon Stacpoole is flying around Brazil this month, trying to capture the perfect shot of players in action. In this photo, taken in Manaus' Arena Amazonia, he turns his attention to his fellow photographers in the moments before the England-Italy match.
The popularity of soccer has long transformed it into much more than a mere sport -- it's a global cultural, political, and economic phenomenon. The bloggers at Amsterdam Cycle Chic are documenting Orange Fever in Amsterdam, for example -- here showing proud fans sporting their team's jersey after their successful opening game against Spain.
As the lead photographer of the 2014 FIFA World Cup Trophy Tour, Joel Robison has witnessed the power of the game to make a change in communities worldwide. He's visited more than 80 countries in the run-up to the World Cup, taking photographs of players along the way -- like these young members of the Palestinian Football Association.
Photographer Tony Burns is currently in Brazil documenting scenes in and around the games, but few shots channel the game's beauty and visceral appeal as the ones in this photo essay from January, showing how it's played in a Buddhist monastery in Myanmar.
Are you currently in Brazil or viewing the games from home? Share your World Cup stories with us!