| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All Gamers | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| TBD-1 | 0% | 1¢ | 99¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win Map 2 of the VALORANT Masters Santiago playoff match between the advancing TBD-1 team and All Gamers. It matters because map-level markets isolate performance on a single map, letting traders price map-specific matchups, veto dynamics, and tactical advantages.
VALORANT Masters Santiago is a stage in the international VALORANT competitive calendar; this item is a Playoffs match, so both teams are competing in a high-stakes bracket. All Gamers is one of the playoff entrants and “TBD-1” is a placeholder for the team that advances from a prior bracket slot — the actual opponent will be set once that preceding match concludes. Map-order, veto rules, and playoff pressure typically shape how teams approach Map 2 differently than earlier stage matches.
Market odds for this map reflect the consensus view of traders and update as new information arrives (map picks, lineups, recent form). Treat them as a real-time indicator of perceived chances and sensitivity to news rather than a fixed prediction.
TBD-1 is a placeholder for the team that advances from a prior bracket match; the identity will be confirmed as soon as that preceding match is completed and the tournament bracket is updated. Official tournament feeds, brackets, and match schedules are the primary sources for that confirmation.
This market resolves based on the official result for Map 2 as posted by the tournament organizer. If Map 2 is not played because of a forfeit or other official ruling, resolution follows the organizer’s match result and the market’s stated rules (for example, voiding or awarding based on official outcomes).
The tournament’s veto format and the teams’ selections decide the map slate and order; depending on the format, the winner of the first veto or a predetermined pick sequence will set Map 2. That means Map 2 can favor the team that either forced a map switch or was able to ban opponent strongholds.
Watch for official lineup confirmations or last-minute stand-ins for either team, the announced map veto outcome (which reveals the Map 2 map), technical issues or server changes, and the result and tone of Map 1 — all of which can meaningfully change market sentiment for Map 2.
Zero or low volume indicates limited liquidity; prices may move sharply on small trades or news, and executing large orders could be more difficult. Traders should factor in higher price sensitivity and check for updated information (lineups, vetoes) before placing trades.