| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FURIA Esports | 0% | 2¢ | 98¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| BBL Esports | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market is a bet on the winner of Map 2 between FURIA Esports and BBL Esports during the Playoffs of VALORANT Masters Santiago. Map-level markets matter because each map is a discrete contest that can swing a series' momentum and elimination stakes in a playoff bracket.
Masters Santiago is an international LAN stage that gathers top VALORANT teams; playoff maps carry high pressure and often reveal adaptation and mid-series coaching. FURIA is a well-established Brazilian organization with international experience, while BBL Esports is a regional contender whose performance on specific maps has determined their tournament progression. Map 2 sits at the center of best-of series dynamics: it can equalize a series after a split Map 1 or put the winning team on match point depending on format.
Prediction market odds represent the collective, real-time view of traders about which team will win this specific map and will move as new information (lineups, map vetoes, injuries, public bets) becomes available. Use odds as a snapshot of market sentiment rather than a fixed forecast; they can shift rapidly in-play or as official updates are posted.
The market resolves on which team wins the designated Map 2 of this playoff series; the traded outcomes correspond to FURIA Esports winning Map 2 or BBL Esports winning Map 2. Resolution follows official match results from the event organizer.
If one team won Map 1, Map 2 may shift in importance: the leading team can press for match-clinching momentum while the trailing team often adapts aggressively to force a decider. Tactical conservatism versus risk-taking tends to change based on Map 1’s result and series score.
LAN conditions, travel fatigue, on-site crowd presence, local server location, and live broadcast routines can alter player performance and communication; these live-event factors often reduce ping advantages and magnify pressure compared with online play.
Key triggers include official confirmation of map veto/side selection, reported roster or technical issues, the result of pistol rounds, major upsets during the early half, and public announcements from teams; markets also react to large single trades or sudden volume shifts.
Low or zero volume indicates limited liquidity and potentially wider spreads; with the close time listed as TBD, markets can remain open until event organizers set final schedules. If volume is low, consider that prices may be more volatile and that execution could be impacted by few counterparties.