| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Team Liquid | 2% | 0¢ | 8¢ | — | $14K | Trade → |
| Gentle Mates | 94% | 94¢ | 100¢ | — | $8K | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win Map 2 of the Masters Santiago match between Team Liquid and Gentle Mates. Map-level markets matter because each map is a discrete contest with its own tactical and map-pool dynamics that can differ from the overall match result.
Masters Santiago is a stage event where teams play a best-of series across multiple maps drawn from the tournament map pool; momentum, map picks, and in-event adjustments often decide individual maps. Team Liquid and Gentle Mates are competing organizations with distinct playstyles and map preferences, so Map 2 can reflect tactical shifts after Map 1 and affect the overall match trajectory.
Market prices reflect the crowd’s view of which team will win the second map and update as new information arrives; interpret movements as changes in traders’ expectations rather than fixed predictions, and treat them as one input alongside match broadcasts and official team info.
Markets for specific maps typically close at or shortly before the official start of that map as announced by the tournament; consult the event schedule and the market page for the exact closure signal, since closure is tied to the match timeline rather than a fixed calendar time.
The market is settled according to the official result reported by the tournament organizer for Map 2: the team declared the winner of the second map is the settled outcome. If the map is not played, abandoned, or results are changed officially, settlement will follow the tournament’s official statement and the platform’s stated resolution policy.
Map 1 results can affect perceived momentum and prompt tactical changes; a decisive loss may lead a team to swap strategies or agents, while a narrow win can shift expectations about confidence and adaptation—traders often react to these signals, which can move market prices.
Substitutions are material information for a map-level market: the market will continue to represent the officially played Map 2 outcome, but traders may reprice based on the substitution. If a substitution triggers an official match forfeit or disqualification, settlement will follow the organizer’s ruling and the platform’s policy.
Live in-map events provide new information that traders incorporate in real time, often causing rapid price moves; early rounds that establish momentum or economy trajectories can shift expectations quickly, so markets may be volatile while the map is in progress.