Football fans had plenty to say over the new NBC Sports scorebug that was leaked ahead of Super Bowl 60.
After a four-year wait, NBC Sports will broadcast the Super Bowl this season. Mike Tirico and Cris Collinsworth will be on the call for the big game at Levi’s Stadium (home of the San Francisco 49ers) on Feb. 8.
It also appears that the network has created a brand new scorebug ahead of Super Bowl 60. According to Manny Soloway of Awful Announcing, a new scorebug was shown during an unscrambled NBC satellite test feed:
I can confirm this is the scorebug on an unscrambled NBC satellite test feed. https://t.co/cg8drvjZoV
— Manny Soloway (@sportsontvguy) January 10, 2026
NFL fans had mixed reactions to NBC Sports’ new scorebug.
“love it,” a user said.
love it
— Showtime (@showtimehcky) January 10, 2026
“Meh,” another said.
Meh
— ✭ (@ReloadRex2) January 10, 2026
“It’s a downgrade,” one fan wrote.
It's a downgrade
— ninja_nick202 (@ninja_nick202) January 11, 2026
“Not bad, not great either,” one user commented.
Not bad, not great either
— Ethan (FIRE WARDE MANUEL) (@ethansportspage) January 10, 2026
“They should just bring this back imo,” said a fan with a photo of the scorebug for Super Bowl 52.
They should just bring this back imo pic.twitter.com/rqBQ0BXghc
— Lucas (@Lucasfloof15) January 10, 2026
“It’s fine. Not as good as the old one but they certainly didn’t miss,” another added.
It’s fine. Not as good as the old one but they certainly didn’t miss.
— vvintage (@vintage7325) January 10, 2026
Well, the reviews are at least better than the scorebug Fox Sports revealed back in the preseason.
ESPN’s computer model gives Seattle the best chance to win Super Bowl 60 at 19.8. The Los Angeles Rams, who narrowly held off the Carolina Panthers in the Wild Card Round, are second at 13.8 percent.
Seattle has reached the Super Bowl every year it finished as the NFC’s No. 1 seed (2005, 2013 and 2014). All they need is two home wins to reach the Super Bowl for the first time in 11 years.
With the Kansas City Chiefs out of the playoffs, the Super Bowl field is more wide-open than ever before. There’s plenty of football ahead, but the postseason promises to be a dandy in more ways than one.