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    Home»Crypto News»Coinbase Returns to Super Bowl With Lo-Fi Karaoke Ad
    Coinbase Returns to Super Bowl With Lo-Fi Karaoke Ad
    Crypto News

    Coinbase Returns to Super Bowl With Lo-Fi Karaoke Ad

    Oguz OzdemirBy Oguz OzdemirFebruary 9, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Coinbase’s TV spot at the Super Bowl divided opinion online, but the crypto exchange says conversations about it were the point.

    Four years after its viral QR code advertisement, crypto exchange Coinbase has returned to the Super Bowl, this time betting on a Backstreet Boys karaoke-inspired ad. 

    Coinbase’s one-minute TV spot during the most-watched sporting event in the US mainly featured text animation flashing the lyrics to the Backstreet Boys’ 1997 hit “Everybody (Backstreet’s Back).”

    Coinbase marketing chief Catherine Ferdon said in a statement that the ad aimed to “bring people together for a shared experience that highlights how the crypto community has grown.”

    It’s Coinbase’s first Super Bowl ad spot since 2022, when it debuted a 60-second commercial featuring a color-changing QR code that bounced around the screen, like a DVD screensaver. 

    The QR code ad directed to a link offering $15 in Bitcoin (BTC) for those who signed up to Coinbase, which was so popular that it crashed the website and reportedly saw 20 million hits in one minute.

    Latest ad divides, but that means it worked, says Coinbase

    Coinbase’s latest Super Bowl ad drew divided opinions online, with some X users saying the commercial elicited jeers amid a market crash and crypto’s ties to the Trump administration. In contrast, others praised it for its simplicity and memorability.

    “If you’re talking about it, it worked,” Coinbase posted to X in response to a user who said the company’s ad was “terrible.”

    Others online also piled onto the ad, with one X user posting “the room I’m in ERUPTED in boos when we found out it was a Coinbase ad,” while Axios reporter Andrew Solender said a room he was in “burst into groans and shouts of ‘fuck you’” after the ad aired.

    Related: UK bans Coinbase ads that ‘trivialized’ crypto risks: Report

    Ethereum Foundation engineer Chase Wright said that “half of the people at the party I was at were singing along and laughed when it was Coinbase.” In contrast, another X user said it was “lowkey genius,” as those who watched it “will 100% remember Coinbase if they ever want to buy crypto.”