| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cloud9 | 0% | 52¢ | 56¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| FURIA Esports | 0% | 44¢ | 48¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win Map 3 of the Americas Cup 2026 match between Cloud9 and FURIA Esports. Map 3 is the potential decider in a best-of-three match, so it often reveals which side handled momentum, map vetoes, and in‑match adjustments better.
Cloud9 and FURIA are established organizations in the Americas esports scene with histories of deep tournament runs and contrasting playstyles; past meetings and recent form in regional events can shape expectations going into a decider map. Americas Cup matches commonly use a map veto process that determines the third map only if the match is tied 1–1, making Map 3 outcomes sensitive to the maps that survive the vetoes and to each team’s map-specific preparation.
Prediction market prices aggregate participants’ beliefs about which team will win the third map based on public information (rosters, map picks, recent form, injuries, etc.). Price movements signal how new information changes market expectations, but markets resolve to the official match result as reported by the tournament operator and the market platform.
The close is listed as TBD; markets of this type typically close either shortly before the match or when Map 3 officially begins. For precise timing and any last‑minute suspensions, check the market operator (Kalshi) and tournament schedule.
The winner is the team that is recorded as winning the third map by the tournament organizer’s official scoreboard; overtime results on the map are included and the market resolves to the official result.
If Map 3 is not played, settlement follows the market operator’s resolution policy (Kalshi) and the tournament’s official reporting; many platforms void or cancel such markets, but you should consult the operator’s rules for this specific event.
Map 3 is determined by the veto/pick process used in the match; the surviving map’s characteristics (layout, favored playstyle, common strategies) can advantage one team, so announced bans/picks and each team’s historical win rates on that map are highly relevant factors.
Yes. Any official roster announcement publicized before or during the match can materially change expected outcomes and trigger market price movement; the market will ultimately resolve based on the match played with the roster listed by the tournament and reported to the market operator.