Platform comparison
| Platform | YES odds | NO odds | Fee | KYC | Settlement | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Who Will Win 2026 Pick polygram.ink |
0% | 100% | 0% (USDC on-chain) | No-KYC up to $1,500 | USDC, auto via UMA oracle | Open on Who Will Win 2026 → |
Polymarket polymarket.com |
0% | 100% | 0% | Geo-blocked in US/UK/EU | USDC, on-chain | Open on Who Will Win 2026 → |
Kalshi kalshi.com |
— | — | Up to 7% per trade | US-only, KYC required | USD | Open on Who Will Win 2026 → |
Betfair Exchange betfair.com |
— | — | 2-5% commission | Full KYC from first trade | GBP / EUR | Open on Who Will Win 2026 → |
Manifold Markets manifold.markets |
— | — | Play-money (mana) | None — play-money | Mana (no cash-out) | Open on Who Will Win 2026 → |
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 Who Will Win 2026.
Active sub-markets
| New Zealand 0 - 1 Egypt | 0% YES | 100% NO |
| New Zealand 0 - 2 Egypt | 0% YES | 100% NO |
| New Zealand 2 - 0 Egypt | 12% YES | 89% NO |
| New Zealand 1 - 2 Egypt | 13% YES | 87% NO |
| New Zealand 3 - 0 Egypt | 3% YES | 97% NO |
| New Zealand 2 - 2 Egypt | 5% YES | 95% NO |
Market context
New Zealand meet Egypt in a FIFA World Cup group match, and the market’s **14% YES** implies a relatively low chance that the exact score lands on the named outcome rather than *any other score*. On a handicapper’s read, that usually means the consensus leans towards Egypt as the more likely winner, with the draw and low-scoring variants carrying some appeal if the game tightens after early caution.
The historical frame points towards a modestly conservative price rather than a broad “anything goes” expectation. Pre-match analysis from USAToday had the majority of previews favouring Egypt, most commonly by a one-goal margin such as 0-1 or 0-2, while one forecast called for 1-1 and another for 0-1 again, which maps to a market that is still anchored around Egypt but not locked into a single script.[1] FIFA’s match-centre listing also shows the fixture as a group-stage game, which matters because group matches often begin with more risk control than knockout ties.[2]
For traders, the main catalysts are team news, late tactical messaging, and any indication of whether New Zealand can repeat the attacking output they showed against Iran, or whether Egypt’s defence can suppress that profile.[1] Yahoo Sports framed the meeting as one where a higher-scoring game was possible, which is relevant because a scoreline outside the obvious 0-1 or 0-2 paths would quickly move the market into *Any Other Score* territory.[5] The value case is usually on the contrarian side when the crowd is clustered around a favourite win but the exact score set includes less common results, especially if pre-match line-ups suggest rotation, a cautious start, or one side settling for control rather than pressure.[2][4]
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
Settlement runs on-chain. Polymarket's contract logic separates YES and NO shares as conditional tokens; at resolution the winning share lifts to $1.00 and the losing one to $0. The outcome input comes from the UMA Optimistic Oracle, which secures against bad resolution with a bond + dispute window.
Once finalised, the smart contract pays USDC to the holders' wallets within minutes — no withdrawal fees beyond Polygon network gas. Kalshi settles in USD via CFTC clearance, Betfair in account currency net of commission, Manifold in play-money mana with no cash-out.
FAQ
- 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 Who Will Win 2026?
- Zero. Who Will Win 2026 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.
- Do I need to KYC for this market?
- Not under $1,500 of lifetime trading volume. Above that threshold, Who Will Win 2026 triggers a quick verification flow that finishes in 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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