| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Over 2.5 maps | 43% | 43¢ | 56¢ | — | $10 | Trade → |
This market tracks the total number of maps played between ENCE and fnatic in the Stake Ranked Episode 1: Closed Qualifier 2026 match. It matters because total maps reflect match competitiveness and informs trading or hedging around match length.
ENCE and fnatic are established esports organizations with significant histories in international Counter-Strike competition; closed qualifiers like this one determine which teams advance to the main event and often feature high stakes and intense preparation. Tournament format (e.g., best-of-one vs best-of-three), recent roster moves, and map pool updates in 2026 can all materially change how this particular match plays out, so check the official tournament page for the confirmed match format and rules.
Prediction market prices represent how traders collectively view the likelihood of different map-count outcomes and will move as new information (rosters, map vetoes, injuries, server issues) becomes available. Use price movement alongside independent match information to form your view rather than treating prices as static forecasts.
It measures the total number of maps that are played to completion between ENCE and fnatic in that scheduled match. For a best-of-three match that normally means either two or three maps will be played; check the event's official format to confirm which map totals are possible for this listing.
The format (BO1, BO3, etc.) determines the possible outcomes and therefore the market's structure — longer formats allow more maps and different strategic dynamics. Before trading, verify the tournament's official format and whether any stage-specific rules (e.g., decider procedures) apply.
Watch last-minute roster confirmations, injury or illness reports, recent team form, and the teams' map-specific win rates; changes in an IGL, AWPer, or star fraggers can substantially increase or decrease the chance of straight-map victories versus competitive series that go to deciders.
Settlement follows the contract's official rules: markets usually settle based on the officially recorded, completed match result published by the tournament organizer. If the match is canceled or the listed matchup does not occur as scheduled, exchanges often void or refund positions per their stated event-disruption policy — check the specific market rules on the platform.
Markets generally settle after the tournament organizer confirms the final official result; overtime rounds are part of the map's outcome and do not create additional maps, and technical issues or match disputes can delay settlement until the organizer issues a final ruling. Refer to the event's official match report for the final determination used in settlement.