| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Team Liquid | 0% | 52¢ | 66¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| BetBoom Team | 0% | 38¢ | 52¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market predicts the winner of Map 2 in the PGL Wallachia 2026 match between BetBoom Team and Team Liquid, letting traders express views on map-specific strengths. Map-level markets matter because map wins decide match outcomes in multi-map series and reveal which team adapts better to a specific map.
PGL Wallachia 2026 is a major esports event with a structured map-pick and match format that determines whether a Map 2 will be played and which maps are featured. BetBoom Team and Team Liquid come from different regional ecosystems and have distinct map pools, playstyles, and recent histories; roster moves, patch changes, and tournament preparation all shape expectations going into any map. The match context (group stage, playoffs, best-of format) also changes the strategic incentives behind map choices and risk-taking.
Market odds are a live aggregation of trader beliefs and available information about Map 2 — they move as new information arrives and should be treated as market-implied expectations, not certainties. Use odds alongside scouting reports, recent form, and map-specific data to form your own view.
Map 2 will be played according to the match format and event schedule: in best-of-three matches it is the second map of the series, while in best-of-one formats a Map 2 does not occur. Check the official PGL match schedule and the broadcast timetable for the exact start time on match day.
The map used for Map 2 is determined by the tournament's pick/ban rules and the teams' choices during the veto process; the exact order depends on whether the match is bo1, bo3, or another format. Consult PGL's published veto format for this event to understand who controls which picks.
Roles that typically swing a single map include the primary AWPer (impact through long-range kills), the in-game leader (tactical calls and adaptation), entry fraggers (opening trades), and anchor/support players controlling post-plant defense or utility. Watch how each team deploys those roles on the featured map.
Past head-to-head results on the same map provide useful context but are only one input: weigh them alongside recent performances, roster changes, patch updates, and map-specific practice. Historical trends matter more when rosters and strategies have been stable.
Yes. Server location and resulting ping, stage setup, travel fatigue, and crowd pressure can all influence individual performance and team coordination on a single map. Top teams mitigate these factors, but they remain relevant when assessing a close map matchup.