| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Colossal Gaming | 0% | 42¢ | 52¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Arctic Pandas | 0% | 51¢ | 58¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win Map 2 in the EMEA Masters 2026 match between Colossal Gaming and Arctic Pandas. Map 2 can be decisive for the series outcome and is of interest to viewers tracking momentum, map-specific strengths, and tournament progression.
EMEA Masters is a regional competition featuring club teams from Europe, the Middle East, and Africa; matches are typically played as multi-map series where each map can shift bracket outcomes. Colossal Gaming and Arctic Pandas are competing organizations with distinct playstyles and map preferences; past meetings, recent roster moves, and current form all feed into expectations for this map. Because this market focuses on a single map within a larger match, context from Map 1 (who won, how it was won) and the broader series format matters for interpreting outcomes.
Market prices represent the collective, real-time view of traders about who will win Map 2, and they respond to public information such as map vetoes, lineup changes, and live match events. Use prices as a dynamic signal that can update quickly when new facts (injuries, subs, official rulings, or tactical reveals) emerge.
This market settles on the officially recorded winner of Map 2 as reported by the tournament administrators; any overtime or map-extension rules applied by the organizer are included in that official result.
Map 2 depends on the series format and the agreed veto/pick sequence: teams alternately ban and pick maps, so Map 2 can be the second pick or the remaining map after bans; knowing the tournament’s veto rules helps predict potential Map 2 selections.
A Map 1 win can change tempo—winners may lean into comfort picks and preserve momentum, while the losing team might make tactical or lineup adjustments, prioritize landing critical pistol rounds, or alter side-start strategies to disrupt the opponent.
Yes; tournament-allowed substitutions, emergency stand-ins, or match delays are material events that can change competitive balance and market prices; settlement still follows the official match record and any post-match rulings by organizers.
Watch early pistol rounds, halftime scoreline, key players’ K/D and utility economy, successful executes or defensive holds on critical sites, and whether either team demonstrates clear mid-map tactical shifts or coach-timeout interventions.