Live odds across esports tournament outcomes, match winners, and game-release markets tracked across major prediction market platforms.
Gaming prediction markets aggregate 503 active contracts as of June 5, 2026, with esports carrying nearly all of the category's depth through 496 of those markets. Coverage runs across the major competitive titles traded today: Counter-Strike, Valorant, League of Legends, Dota 2, and Call of Duty, where contracts ask which team wins a given tournament, series, or map. A smaller game-releases subcategory tracks whether titles ship inside a stated window. Esports contracts resolve against the official tournament bracket once a champion is crowned; release markets resolve on a publisher's confirmed launch date. The live top-markets and movers widgets above show where each contract prices right now, repricing through the competitive calendar as majors and league splits play out.
Esports is by a wide margin the deepest part of the gaming board, accounting for 496 of the category's 503 active contracts. The highest-volume market types are tournament-winner futures and head-to-head series markets across the established competitive titles: Counter-Strike majors, Valorant Champions Tour events, League of Legends international and regional splits, Dota 2 circuit tournaments, and Call of Duty League matches. Each contract structurally asks a binary question, which team or player advances or wins, and resolves against the official bracket. A much smaller game-releases subcategory holds 7 contracts that ask whether a named title ships inside a stated window. The live board above carries current pricing on every one; this section names the durable structure rather than today's cents.
What moves gaming markets is the competitive calendar and roster news, not macro headlines. Tournament-winner odds reprice hardest around bracket draws, group-stage upsets, and the elimination rounds of a major, when a single best-of-five can collapse or confirm a favorite. Series and match markets are the most catalyst-sensitive, swinging on roster changes, patch updates that reshape the meta, and last-minute substitutions. Game-release contracts move on publisher announcements, delays, and confirmed launch dates. For the current biggest movers and exact prices on each contract, the live movers widget above stays fresh from the API; the durable point is that scheduled brackets and roster shifts, not speculation, drive the repricing.
Gaming prediction markets turn tournament outcomes and release timelines into binary contracts that price a clear probability, which traditional esports coverage and bookmaker lines do not surface in one place. Because the same tournament can list on more than one platform, cross-platform price discovery exposes where the implied probability on a Counter-Strike or League of Legends final diverges. Contracts settle objectively, against the official bracket for esports or a confirmed launch date for releases, so there is no ambiguity at resolution. Real-time updates through a best-of series let a reader track how a probability shifts map by map, something a static odds page cannot show.
Coverage spans 503 active gaming contracts as of June 5, 2026, dominated by esports with 496 markets across Counter-Strike, Valorant, League of Legends, Dota 2, and Call of Duty, plus a small game-releases subcategory of 7 contracts tracking title launch windows.
Esports tournament-winner futures and head-to-head series markets carry the volume, anchored by Counter-Strike majors, the Valorant Champions Tour, and League of Legends splits. The live board above shows current pricing on each contract.
Esports contracts resolve against the official tournament bracket once a winner is decided, settling Yes for the team or player that advances or wins. Game-release contracts resolve on the publisher's confirmed launch date relative to the stated window.
As of June 5, 2026, esports tournament-winner futures are the deepest contracts on the gaming board, with 496 active esports markets in scope. Check the live top-markets widget above for the current leader, exact price, and volume, which refresh from the API.
When the same tournament lists on more than one platform, the implied probability can diverge because of different resolution wording and book depth. One platform often runs a deeper esports book while another posts tighter spreads; the live board shows current spread sizes.