| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NIP | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| PARIVISION | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win Map 2 of the NIP vs. PARIVISION match at BLAST Open Rotterdam 2026. Map-level markets matter because map outcomes reflect map-specific strengths, veto strategy, and tactical matchups that can differ from the overall match result.
BLAST Open Rotterdam 2026 is a professional Counter-Strike event where international teams contest matches across a pre-defined map pool; match formats (best-of-one, best-of-three) and the veto process determine which maps are played. NIP and PARIVISION enter the fixture with their respective map pools, recent form, and any roster situations shaping expectations for individual maps; map 2 specifically depends on the veto order and the result of map 1.
Prediction market odds summarize collective market sentiment about which team will win Map 2 and update as new information appears (vetoes, lineups, form, etc.). Use odds as a real-time snapshot of expectations, while also checking live match data and official tournament rulings for resolution details.
The map played as Map 2 is determined by the event's veto/pick process for that match (typically a combination of bans and picks and possibly a coin toss); check the official veto log for this match on the event page to see which map was assigned as Map 2.
This market resolves when the tournament organizers publish the official result for Map 2—normally immediately after the map ends and any overtime is completed; if the map is not played or an administrative decision is made, platform-specific resolution rules apply.
If the match format is changed so that a second map would not be played, the market will follow the platform and tournament rules for such cases (often void or administratively resolved); check the market terms and the event noticeboard for official statements.
Yes—overtime outcomes are typically part of the official map result and therefore count for market resolution unless the event declares a different rule; always confirm via the tournament's official result posting.
Use head-to-head and historical map performance as context for map tendencies, but weigh recent matches, roster stability, and meta changes more heavily—prior results on the same map can indicate tactical matchups but may be less predictive if rosters or game patches have changed.