| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PARIVISION | 0% | 42¢ | 98¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Tundra Esports | 0% | 48¢ | 98¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market covers who will win Map 2 of the PGL Wallachia 2026 match between Tundra Esports and PARIVISION, letting traders and fans take a view on a single map outcome within the series. Map-level markets matter because they isolate short-term factors (map picks, momentum, specific matchups) that can differ from overall match forecasts.
PGL Wallachia 2026 is a tournament-stage matchup administered by PGL where individual maps are played and recorded according to official schedules and rules. Tundra Esports and PARIVISION meet as part of the event draw; historical head-to-heads, recent roster moves, and map pools will all shape expectations for Map 2. Because tournament formats and map pools can vary, map-level results are driven by the immediate context of picks, vetoes, and in-match developments.
Market odds reflect aggregated trader beliefs at a given moment and update as new information arrives (map vetoes, starting lineups, live score, substitutions, technical issues). Use them as a dynamic signal of market sentiment, not as a guarantee of outcome.
The event listing shows 'Closes: TBD'; typically map markets close at or just before the official map start time as set by the tournament. Check the match timetable and the market page for the live closing time.
A win is recorded when the tournament officials declare one team the victor of the second map played in the match and that result is posted by PGL. Market settlement follows the official match report; if the map is not played or is replayed by officials the market may be voided or resolved per the platform's rules.
Veto and pick order determines which team plays a favored or comfortable map and which is left on a weaker pick; knowing which side had the pick or veto advantage and the map's typical strengths for each team is essential context when evaluating Map 2.
Monitor the teams’ confirmed starters and role-specific matchups that matter on the chosen map (for example a lead caller, primary fragger/carry, utility specialist, or map-specific specialist). Late lineup announcements, recent performance on that map, and head-to-head role matchups are the most relevant indicators.
If the match is BO3, Map 2 either decides the series if the same team wins Map 1 (producing a 2–0 finish) or forces a decider Map 3 if teams split the first two maps; if the match is BO1 then Map 2 would not be played. Confirm the format on the tournament schedule to understand Map 2’s significance.