| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Night Agent: Season 3 | 99% | 98¢ | 100¢ | — | $18K | Trade → |
| Love Is Blind: Ohio | 1% | 0¢ | 1¢ | — | $3K | Trade → |
| Reality Check: Inside America's Next Top Model: Season 1 | 1% | 0¢ | 1¢ | — | $2K | Trade → |
| Bridgerton: Season 4 | 1% | 0¢ | 1¢ | — | $2K | Trade → |
| Famous Last Words: Eric Dane | 1% | 0¢ | 1¢ | — | $437 | Trade → |
| Katt Williams: The Last Report | 1% | 0¢ | 1¢ | — | $343 | Trade → |
| The Hunting Party: Season 1 | 1% | 0¢ | 1¢ | — | $301 | Trade → |
| The Lincoln Lawyer: Season 4 | 1% | 0¢ | 1¢ | — | $274 | Trade → |
| Raw: 2026 - February 16, 2026 | 1% | 0¢ | 1¢ | — | $251 | Trade → |
| Sommore: Chandelier Fly | 1% | 0¢ | 1¢ | — | $250 | Trade → |
This market asks which title will be the #2 show on Netflix's US weekly ranking for the current week. It matters because weekly Top 10 placement reflects viewer attention and can move quickly with new releases and promotional pushes.
Netflix publishes daily and weekly Top 10 lists that capture the most-watched titles in a given territory; markets like this use those lists as the resolution standard. Historically, rankings shift based on new drops, returning seasons, broad marketing campaigns, and competing releases across streaming platforms. Because the market has ten outcomes, only the listed titles are eligible to be resolved as #2 for the week covered by the market.
Prediction market prices indicate collective market opinion about which listed title will occupy the #2 slot; interpret prices as the market's best guess at the time, which can change as new information arrives. For final resolution, rely on the market's stated data source and settlement rules rather than short-term price fluctuations.
It measures which specific title among the market's listed outcomes occupies the #2 spot on Netflix's US weekly Top 10 list for the week covered by the market, according to the resolver named in the market rules.
The market resolves based on the weekly reporting period used by the authoritative source specified in the market rules; check the market details for the exact start and end dates or the resolver's definition of the weekly window.
If the #2 title on the authoritative weekly list is not one of the market's listed outcomes, resolution follows the market's contingency and settlement rules—typically documented on the market page—so consult those rules for how such cases are handled.
Yes; older titles can climb into high weekly ranks if they receive renewed attention from marketing, a viral moment, a new season announcement, or placement on Netflix’s editorial panels that increases viewing in the measured week.
The market's resolution clause names the authoritative source (for example, Netflix’s official US weekly Top 10 as published or another specified tracker); always refer to that clause to know which publication will be used to settle the market.