| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bilibili Gaming | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| G2 Esports | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win Map 1 of the First Stand 2026 match between Bilibili Gaming and G2 Esports. Map 1 markets matter because the opening game often sets tempo for the rest of the match and attracts early trading based on draft, prep and team readiness.
First Stand 2026 is an early-season international/region-crossing event where top organizations field rosters to test new strategies and lineups; matchups like Bilibili Gaming vs. G2 Esports draw attention because they pair prominent Chinese and European orgs with strong international histories. Both teams' preparations, roster continuity and off-season changes (coaching, imports, metas) provide important context for a single-map market such as Map 1.
Market odds reflect the collective view of traders about which side will win the first map and will move as new information arrives (drafts, starting lineups, patch notes, withdrawals). For Map 1 specifically, odds typically react quickly to pre-game signals like announced starters and the draft phase.
The official close time is listed by the hosting exchange and/or event operator; because the event page shows 'Closes: TBD', check the market page and the tournament schedule shortly before the match for the platform’s posted closing time—markets commonly close immediately before the first game loads or when official starting lineups are locked.
The outcome is determined by the official match result for the first game: the team that is declared the winner by the tournament officials for Game 1. If tournament officials call a remake, pause, or other exceptional ruling that affects the match result, the market outcome will follow the exchange’s stated rulebook and the tournament’s official adjudication.
A substitution can materially change expectations for Map 1 because it alters champion pools, synergy and lane matchups; traders typically react to announced changes once they are officially posted, and odds/prices may move to reflect perceived impacts on early-game strength and draft flexibility.
Yes: draft and pick/ban information is highly relevant for Map 1 markets because teams’ first-map strategies, priority champions and side selection can indicate comfort picks or targeted counters. Draft signals are often released minutes before game start and can cause rapid market adjustments.
For Map 1 specifically, prioritize recent head-to-head first-map results, roster continuity (whether the same players coached together in prior meetings), and first-game win rates under similar metas rather than season-long aggregated stats. Also consider each organization’s approach to early-game strategy and how prior drafts between these teams have played out.