Enlarge image
1/10
Floating pictures:
an open-air cinema in Cologne.
An excursion boat swayed with a canvas on the Rhine.
The visitors enjoyed the mini public viewing feeling after the many months of the pandemic.
Photo:
Thilo Schmuelgen / REUTERS
Enlarge image
2/10
French fans appeared more exuberant in Cologne.
But there was also more to celebrate for them.
Photo:
Thilo Schmuelgen / REUTERS
Enlarge image
3/10
The possibilities of an island:
On Heligoland, two bar guests followed the game on a television.
On offer: fish rolls and beer.
Photo:
Marcus Brandt / dpa
Enlarge image
4/10
The do-it-yourself public viewing:
In Wiesbaden, fans set up a projector and an obviously improvised screen in a park.
Photo:
Sebastian Gollnow / dpa
Enlarge image
5/10
Things were more professional in the music pavilion in Essen's Grugapark.
And it almost looked like a normal EM.
Only without German goals to cheer.
Photo:
Caroline Seidel / dpa
Enlarge image
6/10
In Stuttgart, the public viewing at the Mercedes-Benz Museum was a relaxed affair.
Photo:
Christian Kaspar-Bartke / Getty Images
Enlarge image
7/10
Ball friends on the Ballermann:
In the "Bierkönig" in Palma on Mallorca the mood was rather "OK".
After all, there was a captain of her own.
Photo:
Clara Margais / dpa
Enlarge image
8/10
In Berlin's Prenzlauer Berg, the restaurants on Schönhauser Allee were well stocked.
After the German opening game of the European Championship in 2008, people danced in the streets here.
Nobody danced this time.
Photo:
Fabian Sommer / dpa
Enlarge image
9/10
Next door at Mauerpark, a parking machine had to serve as a backrest.
Photo:
Fabian Sommer / dpa
Enlarge image
10/10
Things were a little more dignified in a Hamburg restaurant.
The great euphoria did not arise here either.
Photo:
Bodo Marks / dpa