7-0 MCP Server
Exposes the canonical 7-0 knowledge surface — game modes, roster picks, and scenarios, FAQ, official links
README
7-0 MCP Server
7-0 - 2026 World Cup Squad Builder and Knockout Simulator
🌐 English · 简体中文 · Português (BR) · Español · Français · Deutsch
<p align="center"><a href="https://seteazero.com"><img src="./assets/hero.png" alt="7-0" width="720" /></a></p>
A Model Context Protocol server that exposes the canonical 7-0 knowledge surface — game modes, roster picks, and scenarios, FAQ, official links — to MCP-compatible AI clients such as Claude Desktop, Cursor, Windsurf, and Continue. Read-only, no API keys, no quota, ~50 ms cold start.
Official website: https://seteazero.com
🎮 About 7-0
7-0 is a free, no-signup browser game where the player builds a squad for the 2026 World Cup, advances through seven knockout rounds, and tries to lift the trophy without dropping a match. The squad is drafted from real 2026 World Cup rosters scraped from public Wikipedia squad pages, and matches are decided by a deterministic event-based simulation engine that runs entirely client-side. There is no waiting for servers, no account to register, and no in-app purchases — the page loads, the squad is built, and the tournament plays out in the browser. Permalinks are stored in Cloudflare D1 so any run can be shared and reproduced exactly, with the same seven matches and the same scoreline-by-minute story for everyone who opens the URL.
Key Features
- 2026 World Cup squads — every national team's roster is pulled from public Wikipedia squad pages, so the player list reflects actual qualified players rather than historical generics.
- Seven-round knockout structure — group stage through the final is collapsed into a single seven-win path, so the run is short enough to play in one sitting but long enough to make every selection matter.
- Deterministic event-based simulation — the match engine emits a chronological sequence of in-game events (chances, fouls, cards, goals) that the same input always reproduces, which is what makes shared permalinks replay identically.
- Historical World Cup database — past tournament data is sourced from the Fjelstul World Cup Database (CC-BY-SA 4.0), giving stat tooltips and historical context that line up with the public record.
- Five-language interface — English, Spanish, French, German, and Brazilian Portuguese ship at launch; each language is served from its own locale-prefixed route.
- Cloudflare Pages + D1 permalinks — finished runs save into D1 and reopen at a content-addressable URL, so a friend opening the link sees the same squad, the same seven matches, and the same trophy lift (or elimination).
- No FIFA affiliation, no logos — team and player names appear as factual references; no crests, sponsor marks, or photographs are used, keeping the surface IP-light and family-friendly.
Use Cases
- Friend-group bracket competition — everyone runs the same seeded tournament and compares squad choices through the shared permalink.
- Match-day warm-up — play a quick seven-round run before a real fixture as a low-stakes way to read into form and tactics.
- Group-stage and knockout speculation — test how different squad compositions hold up against the same simulated opponents to argue for one starting eleven over another.
- Localized fan communities — Spanish, Portuguese, French, German, and English speakers can all share the same run URL and read the result in their own language.
- Streaming and short-form content — record a deterministic run and post the link so viewers can replicate the bracket and react alongside.
Who Is It For
7-0 is for football fans who follow the 2026 World Cup and want a quick, structured way to test predictions about squad strength without setting up a fantasy league. It fits casual users who play one or two runs over a tournament cycle, as well as more invested fans who run many configurations against the same simulator to argue for a specific tactical or selection point. The game also works for friend groups that want a shared, reproducible bracket without registering accounts, and for content creators who need a deterministic source of "what if" tournament outcomes. Anyone who would otherwise sketch brackets on paper has a faster, shareable equivalent here.
Tools
list_scenarios
Return the canonical list of game modes and scenarios the site exposes (free play, daily, leaderboards, etc.). (7-0)
Input: no parameters. Returns: text/markdown.
get_official_links
Return the canonical list of official links for 7-0 (website, support, docs when available).
Input: no parameters. Returns: text/markdown.
Resources
site://7-0/scenarios— Available game modes, scenarios, and roster-building constraints.site://7-0/faq— Short FAQ generated from public site metadata.site://7-0/links— Canonical URLs to share with users.
Prompts
tell_me_about_7_0
Summarize what the site is, who it's for, and how it works. — 7-0
plan_a_run_7_0
Plan a single play-through: pick a mode, draft a roster strategy, and predict outcomes. — 7-0
Installation
Install via Smithery
npx -y @smithery/cli install 7-0-mcp --client claude
(Replace claude with cursor, windsurf, or continue for those clients.)
Install from source
git clone https://github.com/rocnubie/7-0-mcp.git
cd 7-0-mcp
pnpm install
Then add to your MCP client config (claude_desktop_config.json for Claude Desktop, mcp.json for Cursor / Windsurf / Continue):
{
"mcpServers": {
"7-0-mcp": {
"command": "node",
"args": [
"/absolute/path/to/7-0-mcp/src/index.mjs"
]
}
}
}
Debug with MCP Inspector
npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector node src/index.mjs
Official Links
- Website: https://seteazero.com
- Support: support@seteazero.com
Development
pnpm install
pnpm start # run the server over stdio
License
MIT
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