| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shopify Rebellion GC | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| QoR | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market resolves on the winner of Map 1 between Shopify Rebellion GC and QoR in the VCL North America Stage 2 Swiss Stage 2026; Map 1 is important because early Swiss-stage results shape a team’s path through the bracket. Outcomes matter to fans, bettors, and teams since a single map can set momentum in a BO1-heavy Swiss round.
VCL North America Stage 2 uses a Swiss-style bracket where teams play multiple rounds to qualify for playoffs; early rounds are commonly single-map matchups that increase variance and reward clean preparation. Shopify Rebellion GC and QoR come into this Stage with distinct organizational histories and regional expectations, and their recent roster continuity, map pools, and form will influence Map 1 dynamics.
Market odds reflect collective expectations about who will win Map 1 given available information; interpret movements as shifts in perceived likelihood driven by news (roster changes, map bans/picks, injury or ping issues) rather than guarantees. Because Map 1 in Swiss stages is often a BO1, expect higher volatility and rapid updates as new information arrives.
The market resolves on which team wins Map 1: either Shopify Rebellion GC wins Map 1 or QoR wins Map 1; the result is determined by the official match record for that map.
Markets for a specific map usually close at or just before the official map start; because the event close time here is listed as TBD, check the event’s official schedule for the final close and match start times.
In a Swiss-stage BO1 environment, winning Map 1 reduces immediate elimination pressure and improves bracket position, while losing forces teams into higher-risk follow-up rounds, so Map 1 carries outsized strategic and psychological weight.
Focus on entry fraggers for opening-round wins, the in-game leader for mid-round decision making, and controllers/smoke-heavy players for site control on the chosen map; also watch for operator users and clutch-capable duelists whose impact is magnified in single-map matches.
Head-to-head history is useful only in the context of map-specific results, roster continuity, and recency; small or older samples are less predictive, so prioritize recent map-level matchups and current roster alignments over distant results.