| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overpeek | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| megoshort | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win Map 2 of the ESL Challenger League Europe Cup #2 2026 match between megoshort and Overpeek. It matters because the map result determines that map's payout and can shift momentum in a best-of series.
The ESL Challenger League is a regional competitive circuit that feeds higher-tier ESL events and gives emerging teams international exposure. megoshort and Overpeek are competing within that circuit; their recent form, map pools, and roster stability within the Challenger environment provide the most relevant context for this matchup.
Market odds reflect collective market sentiment about who will win Map 2 and update as match information (lineups, vetoes, delays) becomes available; they are an information signal, not a certainty. Traders should combine odds with match-specific data like map picks, recent map performance, and roster changes before making decisions.
The market will close according to the platform’s schedule (listed as TBD for this market) and resolves to the official ESL match result for Map 2. 'Map 2' refers to the second map played in the official match sequence; if the match is rescheduled or altered the platform will follow ESL's official report for resolution.
If Map 2 is not played or is awarded by forfeit, the market resolves based on the official ESL ruling for that map. In cases of cancellation or abandonment, the trading platform’s stated resolution policy (often tied to the tournament organizer’s official result) determines outcomes.
Veto and pick order determine which team gets a favorable map and sometimes which side they start on; that can materially affect Map 2 expectations. Check the event’s BO3/BO1 rules to know whether the Map 2 pick is chosen by the series loser, winner, or follows a fixed order.
Watch for the teams’ in-game leaders (calling and mid-round decisions), primary fraggers/entry players who win opening duels, and any AWPers or utility specialists whose playstyle is map-dependent. Clutch-prone players and recent role shifts can be especially influential on a single map.
Head-to-head history on the same map provides useful context but can be misleading if rosters, strategies, or the map meta have changed. Use past results as one input alongside recent performances, map-specific stats, and any current roster or tactical updates.