| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| G2 Esports | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Bilibili Gaming | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win Map 1 of the First Stand 2026 match between G2 Esports and Bilibili Gaming. Map-level markets matter because the first map sets momentum in a best-of series and is influenced by draft, early-game strategy, and starting rosters.
First Stand 2026 is a competitive esports event featuring international organizations; G2 Esports is primarily a European organization and Bilibili Gaming competes in the Chinese scene. Regional metas, recent roster moves, and preparation cycles can all shape how each team approaches the first map, while event rules determine roster locks and substitution windows.
Market prices reflect the aggregated expectations of traders based on available information (rosters, drafts, patch notes, form) and will move as new information arrives. Use them as a real-time signal of updated expectations, not as a guaranteed prediction of the final result.
Settlement is based on the official match record for Map 1 as reported by the tournament operator; the market follows the event organizer's official result and the exchange's resolution rules.
The market closes at the official lock time immediately before Map 1 begins; the precise closing time is listed on the event or market page (currently TBD) and will update when organizers announce the schedule.
Substitutions are governed by the tournament's roster rules; any change made before the roster lock for Map 1 can materially affect the expected outcome because different starters bring different champion pools and playstyles—check the event's roster-lock guidance for timing.
The draft determines available champions and direct counters for Map 1, shaping lane matchups, team-composition strengths, and win conditions; a favorable draft can allow a team to pursue aggressive early objectives or a safer scaling gameplan.
In cases of pause, remake, or technical resolution, the market follows the tournament operator's official ruling and the exchange's settlement policy—outcomes may be based on the final official result, a replayed map, or a cancellation per the event and market rules.