"Wanna see one of the funniest brand things ever?" asked Powell.
The content creator noted that the stadium continues to sell the standard fast-food items but is prohibited from displaying any corporate trademarks on the packaging.
"So, they're serving Chick-fil-A at the World Cup, but they're not allowed to show the logo," he shared.
Powell then displayed the interior contents to confirm the product identity to his viewers.
"Literally—same products and everything," he added.
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Public response to the strict branding enforcement has been polarized on social media platforms.
"FIFA needs to get over themselves," wrote a user.
Another football fan expressed severe frustration with the governing body's commercial oversight.
"One thing i learned this world cup and thats the fact that FIFA is a nightmare," added another.
Conversely, some observers expressed appreciation for the break from pervasive commercialism inside sports venues.
"I wish we'd have more of this after the World Cup.
I'm tired of every empty space on a building or product being used as a billboard with ad space," stated a commenter.
Other consumers noted that the extreme censorship of trademarks has inadvertently created a new form of organic publicity for the affected corporations.
"'No Branding' is selling and getting recognized even more," declared a TikToker in the comments section.
Commenters suggested that the aggressive corporate erasure has completely inverted its intended purpose.
"Complete backfire. Companies are using this to their advantage.
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I think there is a new saying. These companies have been 'FIFAed.'"