On this page
Beginner guide
What is a prediction market?
People allocate USDT toward whether something will happen, funds form a pool, and distribution follows preset rules. Below is plain language on how this differs from endless online debate, how rules stay reviewable, and how this site is organized.
Each market states the question, the cutoff, and how outcomes are decided: you express a view with capital and join a shared pool, while settlement follows published criteria—not an opaque random draw.
Rules first: every market reads like a public scoring brief
Elsewhere, win logic can be scattered or hard to reconstruct. Here each market locks its resolution path at launch—deadlines, option meanings, and what data or logic applies—so the same standard runs at settlement and can be reviewed afterward.
Your USDT reflects confidence in an outcome; participants form a pool, and after fees the winning side splits proceeds by contribution. The emphasis is transparent criteria and information, not hidden mechanics.
Capital at risk can still be lost. Join only markets you understand, size positions you can afford to lose, and treat this as a way to learn how the world may unfold—not a promise of quick wealth.
The one-line version
Pick a side, add USDT, everyone forms a pool; when the market resolves, preset rules pay the winning side. More capital on a side usually means more people expect that outcome.
Different from endless online arguments
Debate can continue forever; here, capital plus written rules turn “how convinced I am” into something that settles. There is a cutoff, clear win logic, and a payout path—so discussion can end in a checkable result.
From debate to a clear outcome
Arguing online is free; here, USDT plus preset rules turn “how much I believe” into something that settles. When time is up, outcomes follow public criteria you can review—not endless replies.
It’s not “who shouts loudest”: capital shows conviction, and results can be replayed—useful when you care what actually happens in the real world.
Three channels, three tempos
The home page splits topics by pace so you can jump straight in—no single endless feed to sift through:
- Global: headline issues, short or long horizons—plus community-authored topics.
- Flash: minutes per round, tight rules, great when you only have a little time.
- Crypto: prices and on-chain angles—more fun if you already follow markets.
How the pool pays out here
Most markets are multiple choice. Each option gathers stakes into a pool. After fees, the winning side splits the remainder by how much each person contributed—bigger stake, bigger share. Simple math.
Wallet & profile: how to join
Typical steps for pool markets (follow on-screen cues):
- Connect wallet → pick a market → choose an option → confirm size → wait for resolution; approve in-wallet when asked.
- Some flows touch the chain directly, others use an in-app ledger first—follow the on-screen cues.
- Deposits and withdrawals live in Profile with step-by-step hints.
Trade in and out before the deadline (liquidity markets)
Most markets are classic pools: wait for the cutoff, then resolve by option. A smaller set uses liquidity-style pricing—the quote shifts as people buy and sell, so you can step in or out early instead of locking in until the bell.
Handy when you want quicker feedback or to change your mind midstream. The page labels the style; if you’re new, start with pool markets, then try these.
What you’ll notice right away
Each bullet maps to something you actually click through—no glossary required.
- USDT stakes so numbers stay familiar if you already use crypto.
- Connect a wallet first; prompts tell you when to approve deposits or claims.
- Rules live on the market page—deadlines, options, and how winners are picked.
- After settlement you get a readable recap (AI helps draft it) so you can verify the logic.
- Leaderboards and history add a little friendly competition.
- Fees and per-round caps follow each market and site settings—glance before you join.
How is this different from typical prediction-style products?
No brands named—just common patterns you may have seen elsewhere, contrasted with how things work here.
Accounts & funds
Common pattern
Many products anchor on bank rails, fiat on/off-ramps, and fuller identity verification.
On this site
Here the default path is wallet + USDT with higher self-custody; follow the on-screen steps.
Browsing & layout
Common pattern
A single mega-feed or one global leaderboard is typical— you filter pace and topics yourself.
On this site
The home page splits Global, Flash, and Crypto so you can match mood and tempo.
Where rules live
Common pattern
Some interfaces foreground quotes and fills; rule text may take extra digging.
On this site
Market pages highlight deadlines, options, and resolution logic, plus a readable recap after settlement.
Who authors markets
Common pattern
Several venues list mostly house-standardized questions from staff or partners.
On this site
Community-authored topics are supported within review and policy guardrails.
Fees in plain words
A small success fee may apply when a stake is confirmed; when a pool settles, a platform share is taken from the pool. Rates and caps are shown on each market and in site settings—glance before you join.
Rules & AI explanations
When a market goes live, its data sources and win logic are fixed. The system settles automatically and drafts a plain-English recap. Rare edge cases are handled by ops with a process—not by silently changing outcomes.
Risks & compliance
Check that you’re allowed to participate where you live. You can lose your USDT; on-chain steps have network fees and smart-contract risk. Nothing here is investment advice or a profit promise. Only risk what you can afford to lose.
Want to try?
Browse for a topic you care about, read the rules, start small, then scale up once the flow feels familiar.
Browse markets