Choose when spectacle matters
Best for groups that are comfortable with bumping, falling, recovering, and laughing at the action.
Activity comparison
Bubble Soccer is stronger for high-energy shared laughter and photo moments. Telematch is stronger when the group is larger, more mixed, or needs stations that spread physical demand.
Start here
Choose the group profile. The recommendation balances shared laughter against comfort, heat, and rotation needs.
Decision framework
Both formats can be fun. The difference is whether you want a memorable physical spectacle or a more adaptable event system.
Best for groups that are comfortable with bumping, falling, recovering, and laughing at the action.
Best when the audience includes different ages, fitness levels, departments, or seniority levels.
Bubble suits are memorable, but rest breaks and participant comfort matter more as headcount grows.
Side by side
Use this table when you are choosing between a physical spectacle and a station-based plan.
| Decision point | Bubble Soccer | Telematch |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | Playful groups that want visible laughter and a memorable match. | Mixed groups needing broad participation and flexible station energy. |
| Group-size fit | Stronger for 15-60 people, workable with careful rotations. | Stronger from 60 people upward and better for very large groups. |
| Comfort factor | Higher physical contact and heat consideration. | Lower barrier because stations vary demand. |
| Operational question | How long will people wait for suits and rest breaks? | How many stations keep teams moving? |
Useful next steps
Use these pages when you are ready to compare formats, check details, review examples, or contact Cohesion.
These are the most useful supporting pages for this decision.
Readiness check
Use this before choosing the funnier-looking activity by default.
Brief builder
Send the comfort and scale trade-off clearly.
Proof and context
Use these routes when your approvers need to understand the event-shape difference.
FAQ
Use the Event Planner once you know approximate headcount, date range, venue direction, and the decision that is still open. The planner preserves this page context so Cohesion can respond with a sharper recommendation.
For simple office groups, a shortlist can come first. For larger, weather-sensitive, or multi-zone events, venue fit and activity fit should move together.
No. This page helps you decide the direction. The activity pages still explain the actual format, game modes, setup, and request path.
Next step
Use the planner if you already know the rough date, group size, and event direction.
Open Event Planner