| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outfit 49 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Chicken Coop Esports | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market is a prediction on the outcome of Map 1 in the ESL Challenger League North America Cup #2 2026 match between Chicken Coop Esports and Outfit 49. Map-level markets matter because the first map sets momentum in a series and reflects immediate matchup advantages on a specific map.
The ESL Challenger League is a regional competitive circuit that feeds into larger ESL events; Cup #2 2026 is one of the season's sanctioned cups for North American teams. Chicken Coop Esports and Outfit 49 are competing in a match that will follow the tournament's map veto and format rules; map-level results are often driven by map picks, team roles, and recent roster or form changes. Market activity around Map 1 typically reacts to lineup announcements, veto outcomes, and pre-match reports from both teams.
Prediction market prices for this Map 1 reflect the market's collective expectation for which team will win the first map and will move as new information arrives (veto results, starting lineups, delays). Treat prices as a dynamic summary of available public information and sentiment rather than fixed forecasts.
Yes. This market resolves on the outcome of the first map played between Chicken Coop Esports and Outfit 49 in the ESL Challenger League North America Cup #2 2026 match, independent of later maps in the series.
The listed close time is TBD; the platform will set a specific closing time and typically settles the market after the official match result is published by ESL and verified. Check the market page for the exact close and settlement policy as the event time approaches.
The tournament's map veto rules and picks between the two teams decide Map 1. Teams may ban and pick maps in turn according to the event format, so which map becomes Map 1 depends on those bans/picks and each team's strategic preferences.
Key roles include the in-game leader (IGL) for tactical calls, the primary AWPer for long-range control, entry fraggers who open rounds, and support players who enable executes. Performance from these roles on the chosen map often influences the first-map result.
Late roster or coaching changes can increase short-term uncertainty: they may reduce coordinated strategies and practice synergy, or alternatively introduce a tactical shift that favors one team. Market responses typically reflect the perceived disruption or advantage from such changes until more information (scrims, pundit analysis) becomes available.