| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All Gamers | 31% | 22¢ | 28¢ | — | $204 | Trade → |
| Gentle Mates | 0% | 72¢ | 76¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market covers which team wins Map 1 of the VALORANT Masters Santiago playoff match between Gentle Mates and All Gamers. Map 1 outcome matters because it establishes immediate momentum and can shape map-pick dynamics in a playoff series.
VALORANT Masters Santiago is an international tournament stage where regional qualifiers compete on LAN in a playoff bracket; playoff matches typically carry higher pressure and preparation than group-stage play. Gentle Mates and All Gamers arrive with distinct playstyles and regional backgrounds, and their matchup on Map 1 will reflect recent patch/meta trends, map veto decisions, and any lineup updates.
Market odds are a live collective signal that incorporate public information such as map vetoes, lineup news, and recent match form; treat them as one input among scouting, map history, and live-game developments when assessing Map 1.
The market resolves to whichever team is recorded as the official winner of the first played map in the playoff match; if the match or map is postponed or cancelled, settlement follows the event operator’s and market platform’s published rules.
Winning Map 1 typically provides momentum, forces the opponent to adjust strategy, and can influence map-pick dynamics in a best-of series, making it easier to play with a lead on subsequent maps.
Check the official map veto result to see which map is being played, any announced lineup changes or stand-ins, recent match VODs for map-specific form, and whether either team has notable operator or utility statistics on that map.
Past meetings provide context, especially if they occurred on the same map, but their predictive power is limited by patch changes, evolving agent metas, and team improvements—use head-to-head as one factor among current form and map fit.
A well-executed surprise tactic can decisively swing rounds early in Map 1, but its lasting effect depends on the opponent’s ability to adapt mid-map and on how well the tactic scales over a full map’s rounds.