| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FOKUS | 0% | 3¢ | 97¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| 100 Thieves | 0% | 3¢ | 97¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market covers who will win Map 1 of the Parken Challenger Championship 2026 match between FOKUS and 100 Thieves. Map-level outcomes matter because Map 1 sets momentum, influences in-series adjustments, and is used by traders to express expectations about immediate match dynamics.
The Parken Challenger Championship is a 2026 challenger-level esports event that feeds into higher-tier competition; matches like FOKUS vs. 100 Thieves can affect seeding and progression in the event bracket. 100 Thieves is an established organization with experience at international events, while FOKUS represents a challenger/regional side or rising roster—matchups between different pedigree teams often hinge on map pool alignment, recent practice form, and preparation. Map 1 is typically decided after a veto/pick phase, so the chosen map and the announced lineups are central context for this market.
Market prices reflect the real-time collective view of participants given available information and will move as new facts (veto results, lineups, injuries, delays) appear. Use the market as a snapshot of consensus expectations and update your view when material event-specific information is posted.
Each outcome corresponds to which team wins Map 1 of this match: one outcome for FOKUS winning Map 1 and one outcome for 100 Thieves winning Map 1. The market resolves once the tournament operator posts the official Map 1 result and the market operator verifies it.
The veto/pick phase determines which map is played for Map 1; if the chosen map strongly favors one team, the market will usually react immediately after the official veto is announced. Traders watch the veto closely because it changes the underlying matchup dynamics for this specific market.
A confirmed roster change, stand-in, or absence announced before the match is material information for Map 1: it can change team chemistry, available strategies, and role execution. Markets typically move once the official lineup is posted, so verify team announcements from official channels.
Closure timing is set by the market operator but is commonly at or just before the map starts; resolution occurs after the tournament posts the official Map 1 result and the market operator confirms it. Because the event-close time is TBD, check the market page for the exact close time as it is posted.
Monitor the tournament organizer’s official feed for vetoes and schedule updates, the teams’ verified social channels for lineups and announcements, the official match lobby/scoreboard for live results, and reputable esports journalists or tournament admins for confirmations of delays, infractions, or technical issues.