| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gen.G | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| G2 Esports | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win Map 3 of the First Stand 2026 series between G2 Esports and Gen.G. Map 3 is typically decisive in a best-of-three and can determine tournament progression and standings.
First Stand 2026 is a professional esports event featuring international organizations; both G2 Esports and Gen.G are established teams with experience on the global stage. 'Map 3' refers to the third map in a Bo3 series and is only played if the first two maps are split; the result matters for bracket advancement, prize distribution, and player statistics.
Market odds represent the aggregated beliefs of traders about which team will win this specific Map 3, reflecting public information such as map vetoes, roster news, and in-match developments. Odds update as new information arrives and should be treated as a real-time measure of sentiment rather than a certainty.
Map 3 is the third map of the best-of-three series; it will be played only if G2 and Gen.G split the first two maps. This market resolves to whichever team wins that third map.
The market close time is listed as TBD. Typically, exchanges lock markets shortly before the map begins or when tournament officials confirm the map start; check the platform for the official lock time for this specific map.
There are two outcomes: G2 Esports wins Map 3 or Gen.G wins Map 3. The winning side on that third map is the outcome that pays out; if the map is not played, payout rules depend on the exchange's cancellation policy.
Key influences include which team won specific key rounds (clutches, saves), revealed tactical tendencies, damage to player confidence, any roster or technical disruptions, and how each team adapts between maps during halftime and between-map discussions.
Prior head-to-head results are most useful when they involve the same map and similar rosters; recent matches and map-specific performance give better signal than older or irrelevant-map outcomes. Also consider contextual differences like patch changes, lineup swaps, and tournament pressure.