| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Astralis | 55% | 53¢ | 55¢ | — | $10K | Trade → |
| FaZe | 45% | 45¢ | 46¢ | — | $7K | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win the FaZe vs. Astralis match; it matters to traders and fans who want to capitalize on or monitor collective expectations about a high-profile CS:GO matchup.
FaZe and Astralis are historically prominent European organizations with contrasting styles: FaZe is often associated with high individual firepower while Astralis is known for coordinated tactics and structure. Recent tournaments, roster moves, and form swings can change the matchup dynamic quickly, so context from recent matches and the event format matters.
Market prices on this page represent the crowd’s current expectations and will update as new information (lineups, map vetoes, injuries, delays) becomes available; use them as a real-time signal rather than a fixed forecast.
The market close time is listed as TBD on the event page; check the KALSHI market page for updates. Settlement will follow the tournament organizer’s official match result as reported to the platform.
A 'win' is the official match winner as determined by the event’s series format (best-of-1/3/5). If the match includes overtime or tiebreakers, the team declared winner by the tournament’s official scoreboard is used for settlement.
Map vetoes shape which maps are played and can materially shift expectations because each team has maps where they historically perform better; monitor the announced vetoes and past map performances to interpret market movement.
A roster change or injury will typically move market prices as traders adjust expectations; settlement still relies on the official match result regardless of stand-ins, and any postponement or cancellation will be handled per KALSHI’s event rules.
Trading volume is one indicator of liquidity and price stability; $5,900 is modest and means prices can be more volatile and sensitive to new information, so consider order-book depth and recent trade activity before taking large positions.