| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Favbet | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| FriendlyCampers | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win Map 1 of the CCT Europe Series #18 2026 match between Favbet and FriendlyCampers; map-level markets matter because they isolate performance on a single map and can move independently of match-level expectations.
The CCT Europe Series is a regional competitive circuit where teams play best-of formats and select maps via veto processes; Map 1 often sets the tone for the rest of the match and can reveal strategic advantages. Favbet and FriendlyCampers are competing within that circuit, and their recent scheduling, practice routines, and any roster changes will influence how they approach the first map.
Market odds reflect the consensus view of traders and adjust as new information (map picks, roster news, warmup results) becomes available; use them as a real-time read on expectations rather than a definitive prediction.
The market typically closes shortly before or at the scheduled start of Map 1 as listed on the event page; because the market status here is TBD, check the Kalshi market page or official match schedule for the exact closing time.
The market resolves to the official match result for Map 1 as reported by the tournament organizers; that generally means the team that is declared the winner of the map after all regulation and overtime rounds (if played) will be the winning outcome.
If Map 1 has not yet been finalized, ongoing vetoes and map picks materially change expected matchups because some teams perform much better on certain maps; once Map 1 is locked in, the market will reflect map-specific strengths and weaknesses.
Yes—stand-ins, substitutions, or announced absences typically change team dynamics and are information that traders incorporate quickly, so such news often moves the market for Map 1.
Treat the Map 1 market as a focused view of the first map outcome: use it to hedge or complement match-level positions, especially if one team has a known advantage on the map in question or if you want exposure to early-match momentum separate from the full-match result.