| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FlyQuest RED | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Wanted Goons | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win Map 2 of the ESL Challenger League North America Cup #2 2026 match between FlyQuest RED and Wanted Goons. Map-level markets matter because they isolate one map's outcome, letting traders focus on map-specific strengths, veto strategy, and momentum.
ESL Challenger League Cup events are regional competitions that feed into broader Challenger-level circuits; Cup #2 in 2026 features North American squads competing in best-of series where each map carries separate tactical importance. FlyQuest RED and Wanted Goons are competing organizations within that region; past meetings, current season form, and map pools are the most relevant context for this specific map.
Market odds reflect the consensus belief of traders about which team will be recorded as the Map 2 winner; interpret them as real-time summaries of available information (lineups, vetoes, recent form, injury/stand-in news) rather than fixed truth. Because conditions change up to match start and during play, check official match pages and roster announcements to update your view.
The outcome is determined by which team the tournament officials record as the winner of Map 2. That includes results after overtime or any official administrative decisions recorded by ESL for the match.
Map 2 is the second map in the match order; its start time depends on the event schedule and the duration of Map 1. Timing can matter because late-breaking news (lineup changes, technical issues) may emerge between maps; check the ESL match page and team announcements for the exact timeline.
Official resolution follows who actually played on Map 2 as recorded by ESL match logs. Markets react to announced roster updates prior to play, but settlement is based on the official match record and any ESL administrative rulings.
If Map 2 is not played or the match is voided, the market will be settled according to ESL's official decision and the exchange's settlement rules. That could mean awarding a win by forfeit, voiding the market, or following any specific administrative outcome announced by ESL.
Look at recent performances on the specific map (team and individual roles), side win rates (T/CT) on that map, head-to-head records on the map if available, recent roster or coach changes, and visible strategic trends (utility usage, pace, favored bombsite setups). Use official match pages, demo reviews, and reputable stat sites to verify those signals.