| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| megoshort | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| WW Team | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win Map 1 of the European Pro League Series 6 2026 match between megoshort and WW Team; Map 1 outcomes set the initial map score and can influence series momentum. It matters to bettors because an early map win can affect match pacing, strategic adjustments, and in-play markets.
The market is tied to the European Pro League Series 6 season in 2026, where teams contest a multi-map match format and each map is tradable as its own market. Historical form, recent roster changes, and map pool preferences from both megoshort and WW Team are the primary contextual considerations; because this is a single-map market, small events (lineup swaps, last-minute strategy changes) can have outsized effects. The hosting operator (KALSHI) and the market’s current liquidity can also influence price movement and execution quality.
Prediction market odds reflect the aggregated market view of which team will win Map 1, based on available information and active trading; they are not guarantees but information signals that update as new facts (lineups, veto results, injuries) arrive. Treat odds as a summary of market sentiment and use match-specific research to interpret them.
The two outcomes are that either megoshort wins Map 1 or WW Team wins Map 1; the market resolves to the side that wins that specific map.
The market will typically close at or just before the official match start time for Map 1 as indicated by the event organizer; if the listed close time is TBD, resolution usually occurs once the official match administrators confirm the Map 1 winner after play finishes or after any official forfeit.
Sudden moves often reflect new information such as announced lineup changes, a surprising map veto, confirmed injuries, or credible insider reports about team readiness; check official team announcements and tournament feed before assuming the move reflects long-term truth.
Watch the in-game leader’s callmaking, primary fraggers or duelists on each side, utility usage (smokes/abilities) in key rounds, and the coach or analyst influence during tactical pauses—these elements commonly swing single-map outcomes.
Past head-to-head results can inform expectations—especially on specific maps—but their relevance depends on timing (recent vs. old matches), roster continuity, and whether teams have changed strategies or personnel since those meetings; prioritize recent, map-specific data.