| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fnatic | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Movistar KOI | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win Map 1 of the LEC 2026 match between Fnatic and Movistar KOI. Map-level markets matter because the first game sets series momentum and informs in-play trading for later maps.
The LEC (League of Legends European Championship) is Europe’s top professional League of Legends league, where veteran organizations like Fnatic and regionally prominent teams like Movistar KOI compete at a high level. Map outcomes are shaped by roster composition, coaching approach, and the prevailing game patch and meta, all of which evolve across a season.
Prediction market prices reflect the aggregate views of traders and incorporate available information such as starting lineups, draft tendencies, recent form, and patch effects. Use prices as a snapshot of market sentiment rather than a fixed prediction; they change as new information arrives.
Map 1 refers to the first individual game in the match series. The market resolves to whichever team is recorded by the official LEC match report as having won that first game (i.e., destroying the opposing Nexus).
Resolution follows the official LEC match record: the market will resolve after Map 1 is played on the new date. If the map is not played at all, refer to the market platform’s stated settlement rules for cancellations or voids.
Watch the published starting lineup, any recent substitutions, players returning from illness or suspension, and recent performance trends for high-impact roles (typically jungle and mid). Role swaps and new signings can materially affect Map 1 performance.
Drafts determine champion matchups and playstyle; a team that secures priority picks or denies a key enemy champion can shape the entire game plan. The current patch changes which champions and strategies are strongest, so a team more adapted to the patch can gain an edge in Map 1.
Yes—early kills, first dragon/Herald, and objective timing often shift sentiment in live markets. Before the map starts, monitor announced lineups, draft tendencies, official patch notes, and any last-minute team news (practice reports, travel issues, or injury/sub announcements) that could alter expectations.