Platform comparison
| Platform | YES odds | NO odds | Fee | KYC | Settlement | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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% Walczaki | 0% KOLESIE |
| Map 5 Total Rounds: Over/Under 24.5 | 100% Over | 0% Under |
| Map 1 Winner | 0% Walczaki | 100% KOLESIE |
| Map 2 Winner | 0% Walczaki | 100% KOLESIE |
| Map 3 Winner | 100% Walczaki | 0% KOLESIE |
| Map 4 Winner | 100% Walczaki | 0% 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]
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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