Super Bowl LII: How to Watch the Big Game on TV and Online

Lawrence Yee

It’s Super Bowl Sunday.

The Philadelphia Eagles take on the New England Patriots for Super Bowl LII (that’s 52 if you can’t read Roman numerals) this afternoon. Whether you’re watching because of the game, the commercials, or Justin Timberlake’s half-time show, there’s something for everyone.

There are also plenty of options when it comes to viewing choices.

NBC will broadcast the game on television. Kick-off begins at 3:30pm PT/6:30pm ET. Player introductions and the national anthem (sung by P!nk) will start half an hour prior. Spanish language coverage will be on NBC Universo cable channel.

The game will be also streamed on the web at NBC.com and NBCSports.com.

Smartphone users can download the NBC Sports app (iOS and Android). NFL Mobile (for iOS and Android), Yahoo Sports (for iOS and Android) and Verizon’s go90 (for iOS and Android) apps will also carry the game.

Tablet users can follow the same instructions as smartphone users for the NBC Sports app (iOS and Android)

The NBC Sports app is available on Amazon Fire TV, Apple TV, Google Chromecast, Roku, select Samsung devices, and Microsoft’s Win10 and Xbox One.

Other providers that carry NBC in select local markets include Hulu, YouTube TV, AT&T’s DirecTV Now, Dish Network’s Sling TV, Sony’s PlayStation TV, and FuboTV.

Stick with FANDOM with full coverage of the best Super Bowl LII commercials, trailers (including the first look at Solo: A Star Wars Story and the final Black Panther trailer), and a review of Justin Timberlake’s half-time show.

Lawrence Yee
Lawrence is Editor in Chief of FANDOM. He grew up loving X-Men, Transformers, and Japanese-style role playing games like Dragon Quest and Final Fantasy. First-person shooters make him incredibly nauseous.