| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Galions | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Eintracht Spandau | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market lets traders take a position on who will win Map 2 of the EMEA Masters 2026 match between Galions and Eintracht Spandau. Map-level markets matter because individual maps shift series momentum and can affect match-level markets and tournament progression.
EMEA Masters is a regional tournament that brings together franchise and qualifying teams from Europe, the Middle East and Africa in a multi-map competition format. Matches are typically played as best-of series where each map is drafted or vetoed from a shared map pool, and Map 2 is the second map in that sequence. Tournament structure, recent patch changes, and roster stability across the EMEA scene all influence match dynamics.
Prediction market prices reflect collective expectations about which team will win Map 2 and update as new information arrives (e.g., map picks, roster news, live in-game events). They are not guarantees — use them as a real-time signal that incorporates public information and trader sentiment.
This market resolves to the official winner of Map 2 as determined by the tournament organizers and referees; the winning team on that specific map is the settled outcome.
The market is determined after Map 2 is completed and the result is officially confirmed, including any overtime or tiebreak procedures specified by tournament rules; if a map is formally remade or voided, exchange rules govern settlement.
Treat confirmed substitutions as material information: changes to key roles or the introduction of a less-experienced player can meaningfully alter expected performance on the map and are typically priced into the market quickly.
A lopsided Map 1 can indicate momentum or expose strategic weaknesses, prompting traders to re-evaluate Map 2 probabilities; however, teams often adapt between maps, so Map 1’s result is a strong signal but not decisive on its own.
Pauses or postponements typically leave the market standing until the match resumes; if the map is officially cancelled or results are voided, settlement follows the tournament and exchange rules, so check official rulings for final determination.