| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heroic | 0% | 32¢ | 39¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| FURIA | 0% | 60¢ | 67¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market covers which team will win Map 2 between Heroic and FURIA at ESL Pro League 2026. Map-level markets matter because a single map can determine series momentum, bracket progress, and payout outcomes in match betting.
ESL Pro League is a top-tier international Counter-Strike league featuring established organizations and varied map pools; individual maps often reflect matchup-specific strengths rather than overall series strength. Heroic and FURIA have distinct playstyles and past map histories that make Map 2 a meaningful micro-bet: it can be a momentum swing, a tactical rematch after Map 1, or the decisive map in a short series.
Prediction market odds are an aggregated, real-time expression of traders' expectations and information about Map 2; they are a snapshot that will move as new information (Map 1 result, roster news, bans) becomes available. Treat odds as evolving signals, not guarantees.
Map 2 is the second map played in the match according to the event’s format and veto procedure; depending on the series format (best-of-one, best-of-three), Map 2 can be a momentum-shift map, the decider, or part of a longer series.
Map 1 results inform momentum, reveal tactical tendencies, and expose map-specific weaknesses; a Map 1 win can boost confidence and permit strategic changes, while a loss can prompt lineup or tactical adjustments that materially affect Map 2.
Roles that often swing a single map include the primary AWPer (impactful long-range duels), entry fraggers who open sites, the in-game leader making tactical calls, and clutch-oriented players in late-round situations; matchups between these roles often determine Map 2 outcomes.
The veto order decides map selection and which team starts on which side; being forced onto a weak map or starting on a disadvantaged side can materially change Map 2 expectations, and teams may use Map 1 learnings to influence veto strategy if format allows.
Key update triggers include official lineup changes, travel or technical issues, injury reports, Map 1 tactical revelations, economy and utility availability carried into Map 2, and coach or timeout usage—each can shift the likely competitive balance for Map 2.