| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Team Evictix | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| ROSE | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win Map 2 of the VCL North America Stage 2 2026 match between Team Evictix and ROSE. Map-level markets matter because they isolate performance on a single map and highlight map-specific strengths or matchup edges that differ from the overall series outcome.
VCL North America Stage 2 is a mid-season regional Valorant competition in the 2026 calendar; results here influence playoff seeding, qualification pathways, and team momentum for later events. Team Evictix and ROSE meet in a staged match where Map 2 can swing momentum in a best-of series, and outcomes will depend on each side's map pool, tactical preparation, and any recent roster or form changes.
Market odds for this event reflect the aggregated expectations of traders given available pre-match and live information; they update as new facts (map pick, lineup confirmations, live performance) become known. Use odds as a real-time sentiment indicator rather than a static prediction.
The market settles on whichever team is officially recorded as the winner of Map 2 by the tournament organizer; if Map 2 is not played or the match is forfeited, the trading platform will apply its stated settlement policy—consult the event platform for those procedures.
Map 2 is set by the match’s veto/pick process used by the league and match format (commonly a best-of-3 with bans and picks). The official match page or live broadcast will show the veto history and which team selected or inherited Map 2.
Map 2 contributes to the series score and map differential; while the overall series result is primary for progression, individual map wins can matter for tiebreakers, seeding, and standings within group formats.
Watch the announced Map 2 pick and veto sequence, confirmed starting lineups and any stand-ins, official injury or travel notices, recent match and scrim performance on the specific map, and any coaching or strategy announcements that could materially change expectations.
A one-sided Map 1 can shift momentum, prompt tactical changes, and alter team risk-taking on Map 2—coaches may change agent selections or playstyle, and teams trailing might adopt more aggressive or unconventional approaches, which often changes live expectations for Map 2.