| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yellow Submarine | 23% | 16¢ | 23¢ | — | $66 | Trade → |
| BetBoom Team | 84% | 79¢ | 84¢ | — | $11 | Trade → |
This prediction market asks which team will win the upcoming Yellow Submarine vs. BetBoom Team matchup; it matters because market prices aggregate public expectations about the match outcome and can reflect new information as it arrives.
Both Yellow Submarine and BetBoom Team are competitive organizations within their esport, and matches like this are part of ongoing leagues, qualifiers, or tournaments where single results can affect standings, seeding, and momentum. Historical performance, recent form, and roster stability typically shape expectations going into any head-to-head confrontation.
Market odds represent the collective view of traders about which side will win; they are updated continuously as participants trade and new information (roster news, patch changes, injuries) becomes available.
Traders are buying and selling positions on which team will be declared the official winner of the listed match; the market typically resolves to the match winner as reported by the event organizer or official scorekeeper.
Closure is generally tied to the start of the official match or when the platform announces a cutoff; resolution occurs after an official match result is published by the tournament organizer or other designated authority—check the platform for the exact cutoff since this event lists the close time as TBD.
A low total volume indicates low liquidity, meaning individual trades can move prices significantly and the market may be more volatile or less informative than higher-volume markets; treat price movements with caution and consider that large changes can reflect few traders.
Significant roster changes, substitute players, or verified reports of illness or travel delays typically prompt rapid re-evaluation by traders and can cause sharp price moves because they materially alter expected team performance.
Yes—best-of-one matches are higher variance and more likely to produce upsets, while best-of-three series favor deeper teams and strategic map control; understanding the match format and map pool helps interpret how robust a market price is to random variance.