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Counter-Strike: Walczaki vs KOLESIE (BO5) - European Pro League Series 7 Playoffs

Comparison of odds and platforms for "Counter-Strike: Walczaki vs KOLESIE (BO5) - European Pro League Series 7 Playoffs" — sourced live from the Polymarket order book, curated by Polymarket Review UK.

100% YES 0% NO Volume: $306K Closes: 22 Jun 2026
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Counter-Strike: Walczaki vs KOLESIE (BO5) - European Pro League Series 7 Playoffs

Platform comparison

PlatformYES oddsNO oddsFeeKYCSettlement
Polymarket Review UK Pick
polygram.ink
100% 0% 0% (USDC on-chain) No-KYC up to $1,500 USDC, auto via UMA oracle Open on Polymarket Review UK →
Polymarket
polymarket.com
100% 0% 0% Geo-blocked in US/UK/EU USDC, on-chain Open on Polymarket Review UK →
Kalshi
kalshi.com
Up to 7% per trade US-only, KYC required USD Open on Polymarket Review UK →
Betfair Exchange
betfair.com
2-5% commission Full KYC from first trade GBP / EUR Open on Polymarket Review UK →
Manifold Markets
manifold.markets
Play-money (mana) None — play-money Mana (no cash-out) Open on Polymarket Review UK →

Live odds for Polymarket-based markets come from the Polygon order book. Non-Polymarket venues show attributes only; clicking any row opens the market on Polymarket Review UK.

Active sub-markets

Map 5 Rounds Handicap: Walczaki (-3.5) vs KOLESIE (+3.5)100% Walczaki0% KOLESIE
Map 5 Total Rounds: Over/Under 24.5100% Over0% Under
Map 1 Winner0% Walczaki100% KOLESIE
Map 2 Winner0% Walczaki100% KOLESIE
Map 3 Winner100% Walczaki0% KOLESIE
Map 4 Winner100% Walczaki0% KOLESIE

Market context

Walczaki and KOLESIE are scheduled to meet in the European Pro League Series 7 playoff final, a best-of-five Counter-Strike 2 match that is listed for 22 June and has live-match coverage already indexed by multiple fixture trackers.[1][3][5] In programme terms, that makes the market mostly a function of whether the grand final runs on schedule and reaches a completed result before the settlement window closes; with a current crowd price at 100% YES, the market is effectively treating the match as a near-certainty rather than a live pricing contest.[1][3]

For historical framing, this sort of final tends to settle cleanly when the event page and live-score pages both remain active on the day, especially in smaller C-tier online events where rescheduling risk is usually operational rather than structural.[2][3] A best-of-five also reduces the chance of a technical no-contest relative to a single map, because the series can still produce a winner after interruptions if play resumes and completes under tournament rules. Programmatically, that means a trader watching this market would normally wire alerts to the organiser’s match page, live-score feed, and any stream listing, then classify outcomes by three states: played to completion, abandoned/cancelled, or delayed beyond the market’s seven-day fallback.

The practical catalysts are straightforward: check for a last-minute schedule slip, a stream or bracket update, or a grand-final start time change from the tournament organiser or fixture aggregator.[1][2][3][5] Dust2.us and GosuGamers both still show the matchup as today’s live fixture, while Liquipedia identifies the event as an online European CS2 tournament, which is the main dependency to monitor if a postponed final would push the market towards its 50-50 fallback rather than a team settlement.[1][2][3]

Sources: 1 · 2 · 3 · 4 · 5

Methodology

Methodologically we separate two layers: the live probability (Polymarket mid-price) and the platform attributes (fee, KYC, settlement currency, payment rails). The odds column is filled only where we have clean data — that avoids the made-up numbers that get a network demoted when search engines cross-check against the source venue.

Resolution & payout

Polymarket-based markets settle through the UMA Optimistic Oracle on Polygon. A proposer submits the outcome, a two-hour challenge window opens, and unchallenged proposals finalise the resolution. Payouts settle automatically in USDC the moment the result is final — no bookmaker, no delay.

Kalshi-based markets settle in USD via the CFTC-regulated clearinghouse. Betfair Exchange settles in GBP/EUR net of commission. Manifold is play-money and does not pay out real funds.

FAQ

Is this market available outside the US?
Polymarket Review UK is available in most jurisdictions where Polymarket isn't directly accessible. Polymarket itself is geo-blocked in the US/UK/EU. Always check local regulations.
What's the difference between YES and NO shares?
A YES share pays $1.00 if the event happens, $0 otherwise. A NO share pays $1.00 if the event doesn't happen. The market price between 0¢ and 100¢ is the implied probability.
What does it cost to trade on Polymarket Review UK?
Zero. Polymarket Review UK routes every order to the live Polymarket order book; the only cost is the Polygon network fee, typically under $0.01 per transaction.
How fast are USDC deposits?
Polygon credits deposits after 12 confirmations — usually under 30 seconds. Withdrawals follow the same path and land back in your wallet within minutes.
How reliable are the quoted odds?
The YES/NO percentages are the live mid-prices of the Polymarket order book. On deep markets they move every few seconds; on thinner ones you'll see short plateaus.
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