| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MOUZ | 0% | 43¢ | 87¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| OG | 0% | 48¢ | 54¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market resolves on which team—MOUZ or OG—wins the first map played in their match at PGL Wallachia 2026. Map-one outcomes matter because they set in-match momentum and shape veto and strategic choices for the remaining maps.
MOUZ and OG are established professional CS teams with distinct playstyles and map pools; their past meetings, recent results, and roster stability all feed into expectations for a given map. PGL Wallachia 2026 is an organized international event where matches typically use a map-veto procedure, so the identity of Map 1 is a tactical result of the veto/selection process as much as raw team strength.
Market odds summarize the trading community’s consensus given public information (injuries, roster announcements, vetoes, demos, etc.) and will move as new facts arrive. Use the odds as a live snapshot of collective expectations, and cross-check with official roster and map-veto updates for context.
The start time depends on the official PGL match schedule and the match’s slot on the day; PGL posts exact kickoff times and any delays on the event schedule and social channels. Watch for the published match time in your local timezone and confirm minor adjustments on the day of play.
Map 1 is determined by the match’s map-veto procedure as specified by PGL for that stage (for example, bans and picks in a best-of-three). The exact sequence (who bans/picks first) follows the event’s official veto rules, so check the published match rules or broadcast pre-match segment for the definitive process.
The market resolves to the team that is officially recorded by PGL as the winner of the first map played in the match. Official outcomes include standard-time wins, overtime results as governed by tournament rules, and PGL-declared forfeits or match cancellations—consult PGL rulings for edge cases.
Key developments include announced roster changes or stand-ins, last-minute illness or travel problems, an unexpected map veto change, technical/server issues affecting ping, or a patch or game-balance update announced before the match that changes map dynamics.
Winning Map 1 usually grants momentum and may force the opponent into different veto or tactical choices for subsequent maps; it can also influence coach decisions and in-series psychology. Tournament implications (group standings or bracket progression) depend on the overall match result and event format, so Map 1 is an important piece but not the sole determinant of tournament advancement.