| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Team Spirit | 0% | 48¢ | 61¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Xtreme Gaming | 0% | 42¢ | 55¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win Map 1 of the PGL Wallachia 2026 match between Team Spirit and Xtreme Gaming. Map 1 outcomes matter because they set momentum in a series and are the entire contest in single-map matches.
PGL Wallachia 2026 is a professional esports event run by PGL featuring regional and international teams; organizers typically use map-based formats (BO1/BO3) that determine how decisive a single map is. Team Spirit and Xtreme Gaming bring different histories and playstyles—Team Spirit is an established organization at international events, while Xtreme Gaming may be a rising or regionally focused roster—so historical form, recent results, and map pools are key context. The market’s metadata (number of outcomes, volume, close time) reflects how this particular question is framed for traders.
Market odds are a live reflection of trader sentiment about who will win Map 1; interpret them as consensus-informed signals rather than fixed predictions, and remember they can change up to market close (which is listed as TBD here).
The market resolves on the officially reported winner of Map 1 as recorded by the event organizers, including any overtime played; settlement follows the tournament’s official match result.
Markets like this usually close at or shortly before the official map start; TBD means the precise close time has not been published yet and will be set relative to the match schedule once finalized.
In a BO1, Map 1 is the entire match and is therefore decisive; in a BO3, Map 1 is the opener and mainly influences momentum and veto dynamics for remaining maps.
Consider the timing and role of changes: a new primary rifler, AWPer, or in-game leader can have outsized short-term effects on a single map, while longer-term cohesion usually improves over many matches.
Zero or low traded volume indicates little market participation so far, which can mean wider spreads and that quoted odds may shift substantially with new information or initial trades; it does not reflect the match outcome itself.