| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Team Nemesis | 0% | 28¢ | 44¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Team Falcons | 0% | 62¢ | 75¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market covers the outcome of Map 1 between Team Nemesis and Team Falcons at PGL Wallachia 2026; it matters because the first map sets momentum in a series and can influence later maps and tournament standing.
PGL Wallachia is the organizer’s major event format where matches are typically played as multi-map series with a pre-match veto process determining Map 1. Team Nemesis and Team Falcons each bring organizational histories and recent competitive results that shape expectations, while venue conditions, travel, and patch or meta changes can alter the balance between them.
Market prices reflect how participants collectively weigh available information — map preference, lineup news, and recent performance — and update as new information arrives; use market movement as a signal but combine it with your own assessment of the listed factors.
The market resolves based on which team wins the first official map played between Nemesis and Falcons at PGL Wallachia 2026; the official match referee and tournament rules determine map completion and any exceptional circumstances.
Overtime outcomes count toward the Map 1 result; the eventual winner after any overtime periods is considered the Map 1 victor for this market, subject to official match rulings.
This market closes according to the platform’s listed deadline (currently TBD); the official PGL schedule and match page provide the planned map start time, and markets generally close before the map begins or when the platform specifies.
Look at head-to-head results specifically on the chosen map and under similar conditions (LAN vs. online, same patch); isolated past wins matter less than map-specific trends and any roster or strategic changes since those meetings.
Late substitutions, illnesses, or role shuffles can materially change expectations for Map 1; reputable reports from team officials or tournament bulletins should be weighted heavily and can cause rapid market adjustments.