| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Team Falcons | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| NRG | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win Map 1 of the NRG vs. Team Falcons match at BLAST Open Rotterdam 2026. The first map often sets momentum in a match and is a common single-map betting market on esports exchanges.
BLAST Open Rotterdam is an international Counter-Strike event that attracts established professional teams and rising organizations. NRG and Team Falcons come into the event with different histories, roster stability, and experience on the international stage; those differences, plus the tournament's map-pick procedures, shape expectations for Map 1. Past head-to-heads, recent results, and map pool familiarity all provide relevant context without guaranteeing outcomes.
Market prices represent the collective, real-time view of participants about who will win Map 1; they update as new information (lineup changes, map picks, injury reports) emerges. Use them as a snapshot of sentiment and information flow rather than a fixed prediction.
The market typically closes at or just before the official start of Map 1 as listed on the tournament schedule; check the exchange’s event page for the exact close time because closing rules are platform-specific.
Settlement follows the official result posted by the tournament organizers for Map 1, including any overtime result or official post-match corrections; the exchange will rely on those authoritative match reports when settling the market.
A confirmed roster change or stand-in announced before market close typically moves market sentiment; if a change is revealed after close, how it is handled depends on the exchange’s rules and the tournament’s official stance—check platform policies for late-notice adjustments or voiding conditions.
Yes — Map 1 is determined by the event’s pick/ban process or by pre-set map order for the match format; knowing who picked or vetoed which maps helps assess matchup advantages because teams have uneven strengths across different maps.
Resolution follows the tournament organizer’s official ruling and the exchange’s settlement policy; common outcomes include settling to the official result once decisions are posted, voiding the market if the match is canceled, or waiting for a replayed/confirmed result—consult the platform’s event rules for specifics.