We Just Added 40+ DOOH Campaigns and 64 Billboard Screens to Our Library
FOOH.com now includes a full DOOH library with 40+ real 3D billboard campaigns and a screens section covering 64 locations worldwide, from Times Square to Shibuya Crossing.

FOOH.com has always been the place to find the best fake out-of-home campaigns. CGI illusions, viral moments, social-first creativity. That’s what the library was built for, and it’s not going anywhere.
But if you’ve been paying attention to what’s happening with real billboards lately, you know the line between FOOH and DOOH is getting blurrier by the day. 3D anamorphic displays, building-sized LED walls, screens that make products look like they’re flying into the street. The real world is catching up to the CGI one.
So we built something we’ve wanted to add for a long time: a complete DOOH section, right alongside the FOOH library. And a dedicated screens database that didn’t exist anywhere else in this format.
The DOOH Library Is Live
You can now browse real 3D billboard campaigns the same way you browse FOOH. Filterable, searchable, and with all the details you’d actually want.
We’re launching with 40 campaigns from brands like Nike, BMW, Louis Vuitton, Pepsi, Audible, Samsung, and Netflix. This is just the initial batch, and we have many more prepared and will keep adding them over the coming weeks. Each entry includes the campaign video, brand info, screen location, and creative credits where available.
Every single one of these ran on a real screen, somewhere in the world. No concepts, no demo reels.
Switch between FOOH and DOOH using the toggle at the top of the library. Same format, same experience, just a whole new category of work to explore.
A Screens Section That Didn’t Exist Before
This is the part we’re most proud of. There’s no single place online where you can browse the world’s most iconic DOOH screens with specs, maps, operators, and the campaigns that actually ran on them. So we made one.
The screens section launches with 64 locations across multiple continents. Some highlights:
- Times Square, New York: the most famous advertising real estate on the planet
- Shibuya Crossing, Tokyo: massive LED screens towering over one of the busiest intersections in the world
- Piccadilly Lights, London: the curved screen that dominates Piccadilly Circus
- K-Pop Square, Seoul: home to some of the most impressive 3D billboard content out of South Korea
- Chengdu 3D LED, China: the screen that kicked off the global 3D billboard trend
And dozens more across Europe, the Middle East, Southeast Asia, and the Americas.
Every screen page gives you what you’d normally have to dig through multiple sources to find: the operator, physical dimensions, resolution, estimated foot traffic, demographics, approximate media costs, and an interactive map pinpointing the exact location.
The best part: every screen links directly to the DOOH campaigns that ran on it. Researching what kind of creative has been shown on the Outernet London or the Burj Khalifa LED facade? You can see real dooh advertising examples right there on the page.
Whether you’re a media planner scouting locations, a creative director pulling references, or someone building a pitch deck, this should save you hours.
Why Both Belong in One Place
FOOH and DOOH are two sides of the same creative coin.
FOOH takes a real-world setting and adds something impossible. A giant sneaker crashing through a building, a mascot climbing the Eiffel Tower. It’s built for social media. DOOH takes a real screen in a real location and creates the same kind of spectacle: objects breaking out of flat surfaces, 3D illusions that trick your brain into seeing depth. It’s built for the street, but increasingly ends up on social media too.
Both push creative boundaries. Both surprise people. And both are growing fast.
Having them in one place makes FOOH.com the single destination for anyone working in digital out-of-home advertising or dooh marketing. Whether you’re looking for inspiration, references, or data on specific dooh screens and locations.
No more digging through scattered LinkedIn posts and YouTube clips.
This Is Just the Start
We’re actively expanding both sections. More campaigns, more screens, more data. The DOOH library will grow alongside the FOOH collection, and we’ll keep adding screen locations as new ones come online around the world.
Go explore:



