| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Over 2.5 maps | 0% | 41¢ | 51¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks how many maps will be played in the CCT South America Series #9 2026 match between Isurus and Fake do Biru, which matters to traders who want exposure to match length rather than winner. Total-maps markets capture expectations about whether the fixture will be settled in fewer or more maps, reflecting matchup balance and format.
CCT South America Series is a regional Counter-Strike competition on the 2026 calendar; matches between Isurus and Fake do Biru will be shaped by each club's recent results, lineup decisions, and the tournament stage. Historically, South American fixtures can swing between short decisive maps and extended series depending on map pools, veto strategies, and whether the match is a group-stage or playoff encounter.
Market odds represent the collective view of traders about how many maps this specific match will require; they are not fixed forecasts but update as new information (lineups, format confirmation, injuries) becomes available. Use the market alongside official match format and roster announcements to interpret what the prices imply about expected series length.
This market resolves based on the official number of maps played in the match (including overtime maps if applicable) as recorded by the tournament operator; check the platform’s rules for details on how multi-map overtimes are counted and when the market is settled.
Close and settlement timing is set by the market operator and may be updated on the platform; typically markets close before the match starts and settle after the official match result is posted, but if the match is delayed or rescheduled settlement follows official tournament confirmation.
Roster changes can materially affect expectations for map length — a stable, practiced lineup tends to produce more predictable series, while an emergency substitute or temporary roster change increases uncertainty and can shift expectations toward shorter or longer maps depending on player profiles and chemistry.
Playoff or elimination matches often lead teams to prioritize map-winning strategies and may result in fuller series (teams fighting harder to stay alive), whereas group-stage matches can see more experimentation or conceded maps depending on standings, which affects the likely number of maps played.
Look for tendencies such as how often each team closes series early on maps they favor, whether their games commonly go to the decider in recent events, and how they perform on maps that are frequent veto targets — these patterns give context on whether this specific matchup historically trends toward short or extended series.