| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aurora Gaming | 0% | 49¢ | 59¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| paiN | 0% | 41¢ | 54¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market covers the outcome of Map 1 between Aurora Gaming and paiN in ESL Pro League 2026, letting traders take positions on which team will win the opening map. Map 1 matters because it sets momentum for the match and is often a focal point for early market movement.
ESL Pro League is a major international league for Counter‑Strike, featuring teams from multiple regions and a mix of online and LAN stages; results here affect seeding, prize money, and international reputation. Aurora Gaming and paiN bring distinct regional pedigrees, roster histories, and map pools that influence expectations for their matchup on Map 1.
Prediction market prices represent the collective market view of which team is likely to win Map 1 and update as new information arrives. Treat prices as a real‑time consensus signal rather than a guarantee—monitor live developments like veto results, roster news, and match delays.
The market close is shown as TBD on the platform; markets like this normally close at or shortly after the official match start time. Check the ESL Pro League schedule and the market page for the latest kickoff and closure updates.
There are two outcomes: Aurora Gaming wins Map 1, and paiN wins Map 1. The market resolves to the team that wins Map 1 according to the event’s official result, including any overtime results per tournament rules.
Teams follow the tournament’s veto procedure to ban and pick maps; the map that ends up as Map 1 can dramatically shift expectations if it favors one team’s strengths. Watch the live veto to see whether Map 1 aligns with a team’s best maps or forces them onto a weaker surface.
Late confirmed roster changes—such as a starting player being replaced, a star AWPer or in‑game leader missing, or an untested stand‑in playing—are high‑impact. Only official team or tournament announcements should be used to re‑assess positions, since unverified reports may be incorrect.
Resolution follows ESL and platform rules: overtime counts toward the match winner, and technical pauses or in‑game interruptions are handled by match officials; in rare cases of cancellation or rule violations, the platform’s settlement policy determines whether the market is voided or resolved. Consult the market’s settlement rules and the event organizer’s adjudications for specifics.