| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shopify Rebellion | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| ROSE | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This prediction market concerns which team wins Map 1 between ROSE and Shopify Rebellion in the VCL North America Stage 2 Swiss Stage 2026. Map-level markets matter because the first map sets momentum for the match and has direct consequences for Swiss-stage standings.
VCL North America Stage 2 uses a Swiss-style stage where teams play multiple matches to climb the bracket or avoid elimination; each match and map contributes to a team's progression. ROSE and Shopify Rebellion are competing professional rosters whose recent form, map pools, and roster stability shape expectations for individual maps. Market prices will reflect collective trader assessment of those variables as new information—vetoes, lineups, and match-day developments—arrives.
Prediction market odds here represent the market's aggregated view of which side is expected to win Map 1 and will change as traders react to new facts. Interpret odds as a real-time signal of sentiment, not a guarantee: they update when teams announce maps, lineups, or when match conditions change.
The market resolves based on the official result of Map 1 once that map concludes; if the map or match is cancelled, postponed, or ends in a technical forfeit, the exchange's published resolution rules determine the outcome—check the market page for those specifics.
A 'win' is the team officially recorded as the winner of the first map played in the match; overtime or extended rounds that produce a winner are included, while maps voided by the organizer or resolved by technical decision follow the exchange's settlement policy.
Because the Swiss stage rewards each match outcome for progression, teams may approach early maps with different risk profiles—some play aggressively to secure a quick win, others prioritize stability. Map 1 can influence momentum and bracket position, making it strategically significant beyond a single match.
Roles that typically swing map outcomes include primary duelists/entry fraggers, the team's marksman/AWPer-equivalent, and the in-game leader who calls strategies; recent stand-ins or coaching changes can also materially affect performance on Map 1.
The veto process determines the actual map played as Map 1, so the market can shift substantially after picks and bans are announced; monitor the veto closely because map-specific strengths, agent/composition synergies, and historical head-to-head results on that map are key drivers of outcome expectations.