| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FURIA | 0% | 57¢ | 94¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Astralis | 0% | 43¢ | 47¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market tracks the outcome of Map 2 in the ESL Pro League 2026 match between Astralis and FURIA, letting traders express expectations for which team will win that specific map. Map-level markets matter because they isolate performance on a single map independent of the overall match result.
ESL Pro League is a premier competitive circuit in Counter-Strike with a map-veto system that determines map order before play. Astralis and FURIA are established organizations with contrasting styles — Astralis often emphasizes structured utility and defaults, while FURIA is known for fast, aggressive executes — making map selection and matchup dynamics especially important. Map 2 can be pivotal for momentum in a best-of-three match or decisive in formats where multiple maps matter.
Market prices on this event represent the collective, up-to-the-minute assessment of which team will win Map 2 and will move as new information arrives (lineups, veto results, injuries, live events). Use market prices as a snapshot of market sentiment rather than a guaranteed outcome; they update continuously as conditions change.
Map 2 refers to the second map played in the match as decided by the tournament’s map-veto process; the specific map (e.g., Mirage, Nuke, etc.) is determined during the veto phase before the match begins and can significantly affect which team has the advantage.
Settlement follows the exchange’s rules and the official result reported by ESL; if a map is postponed, not played, or the match is voided, the market will be settled or refunded according to the platform’s stated cancellation and settlement policy and the tournament operator’s official outcome.
A substitution can materially change the expected dynamics for Map 2 because of role changes, communication, and map experience; markets typically react quickly to official lineup announcements, so treat such updates as high-impact information that may warrant reassessment.
Map 2 timing depends on the match format (best-of-one vs. best-of-three) and tournament schedule; in best-of-three it plays second unless the match ends in two maps, while event scheduling and broadcast delays can shift start times — the market’s close time is set by the platform and may update if match timing changes.
Look for head-to-head records between the teams on the specific map, each team’s recent results on that map, pistol round conversion rates, CT/T-side round splits, and trends in utility and economy management — these map-specific metrics provide context for how the matchup typically unfolds.