| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AKA HERO KAJO | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Rune Eaters | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market is on who wins Map 2 between AKA HERO KAJO and Rune Eaters in the ESL Challenger League Europe Cup #2 2026. Map-level markets matter because they isolate team performance on a specific map and can move quickly with in-match developments.
The ESL Challenger League Europe Cup is a regional, professional-level competition that offers teams a pathway to higher-tier events and ranking points in 2026. AKA HERO KAJO and Rune Eaters each bring distinct map pools and recent competitive histories; Map 2 outcomes will reflect pre-match vetoes, map-specific strengths, and any roster or strategy adjustments made after Map 1. Veto order and match format determine which map becomes Map 2 and influence how teams prepare tactically.
Market odds aggregate public information and participant expectations about which team will win Map 2 and will update as lineups, scrim reports, or in-match events emerge. Treat market prices as a dynamic consensus signal rather than a guarantee—check official match reports for final settlement.
The market settles on which team is recorded as the official winner of Map 2 by ESL match officials; if the map is not played or the match is voided per tournament rules, settlement follows the market operator’s announced policy.
Map 1 outcomes affect momentum, confidence, and potential tactical changes; the losing side may shift compositions or employ riskier strategies in Map 2, while the winner may adapt to preserve advantages or counter-picks.
Map 2 is the second map that remains after the teams complete the event’s ban/pick sequence; the exact selection order depends on the tournament format and is published on the match page and official rules.
Settlement is based on the official match result regardless of roster changes, but unexpected substitutions, ineligibility rulings, or official sanctions can influence both expectations and whether a market is voided under the operator’s rules.
If closing time is TBD, traders should monitor the official ESL schedule and the market announcements; markets typically lock shortly before the map start or when an official match start time is confirmed, and delays or postponements can shift the lock time.