| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nongshim RedForce | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Paper Rex | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win Map 2 of the VALORANT Masters — Masters Santiago playoff match between Paper Rex and Nongshim RedForce. Map 2 is important because its result affects series momentum and can determine whether the match is decided or forced to a decider.
Paper Rex and Nongshim RedForce are competing at an international VALORANT Masters playoff stage in Santiago, where regional champions and invited teams face off across a rotating map pool. Both organizations bring distinct regional metas and playstyles—Paper Rex often emphasizes aggressive, high-mobility engagements while Nongshim RedForce is known for disciplined executes and tactical adaptations—so map selection and mid-series adjustments are central to outcomes.
Prediction market prices reflect the market’s collective expectation for who will win Map 2 and update as new information arrives (map picks, player availability, in-series momentum). They are not guarantees; they’re signals that synthesize public and professional information into a single, dynamic estimate.
Map 2 is the second map played in the head-to-head series between Paper Rex and Nongshim RedForce. In the playoff format used at VALORANT Masters events, this map can either decide the series or force a deciding map depending on the Map 1 result.
Map 1 affects momentum, reveals tactical tendencies and economy/utility habits, and may inform agent or strategy changes. A one-sided Map 1 can lead the trailing team to make bolder roster or agent swaps, while the winning team may double down on what worked.
Duelists who secure early entries, the in-game leader who calls mid-round adaptations, and controllers/smokes who enable site takes or retakes are typically decisive. Support roles that manage economy and utility timing also heavily influence multi-round success.
Map veto determines which map is played for Map 2 and can result in a team playing its preferred pick or a neutral map neither team favors. The specific veto rules and which team earns the Map 2 pick (based on seeding or previous map result) materially affect strategic advantages.
Roster substitutions, technical issues (server or connection problems), official pauses, visible strategic changes (agent swaps, different executes), and public statements from teams or coaches can all shift expectations and market pricing for Map 2.