Over the past seven episodes, we followed a single thread: how crypto companies moved from sideline billboards into the World Cup (A History of Sponsorships), how star players signed endorsement deals with exchanges (Star Endorsements Over Five Years), how clubs minted fan passion into tokens (Fan Tokens), how collectibles evolved from trading cards to on-chain assets (Sorare & FIFA Collect), how prediction markets became new rivals to traditional bookmakers (Market Structure), and how a single "probability of winning" is actually produced (The Methodology of Odds).
All seven episodes discussed the same thing—how crypto gradually entered the world of soccer. Now, six days before kickoff, we pull the lens from history back to the present, focusing on just one question: On the eve of the tournament, what scale have these on-chain markets reached?
Data as of June 5, 2026. All prices and volumes are subject to change and may differ at the time of publication.
Act I · One Platform, One Contract, $1.6 Billion
First, a number.
Just the "World Cup Winner" contract on the Polymarket platform alone had accumulated approximately $1.6 billion in total trading volume as of June 5 (Polymarket's official market page shows "$1.6 billion in total trading volume"; the contract launched in July 2025)[1].
The World Cup hasn't even kicked off a single match.
This didn't appear overnight but followed a clear upward curve:
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March 25: Approximately $368 million [2]
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May: Surpassed $1.2 billion [3]
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June 5: Approximately $1.6 billion [1]
The last two months before kickoff marked the steepest part of this curve—each new piece of information closer to the tournament, such as squad announcements and friendly match results, pushed trading volume higher.
Zooming out to the entire sector: the total annual trading volume for the prediction market industry grew from roughly $16 billion in 2024 to about $64 billion in 2025, a fourfold increase [2]. Some analysts expect 2026 could surge to over $300 billion [2].
Four years ago, the 2022 Qatar World Cup was the first major event where Polymarket saw "significant trading volume" [5]. Four years later, a single championship contract has reached a scale of tens of billions. It took one World Cup cycle to go from a niche experiment to a multi-billion-dollar market.
Act II · How Contracts Come Alive in Real-Time with Match Results
The $1.6 billion is for the single "winner" contract. But what truly comes alive after kickoff are the individual match contracts covering every game.
Polymarket's World Cup category has approximately 100 markets, covering all 104 matches; combined with Kalshi, the two platforms offer over a hundred contracts—from the champion and top scorer to qualifiers from each group and the win/draw/loss of every match [6].
Group contracts are already trading. For example, as of June 4: Group A—Mexico ~53%, South Korea ~23.5%, Czech Republic ~18.5%, South Africa ~6.3%; Group B—Switzerland ~56%, Canada ~31%; Group D—USA ~39%, Turkey ~33% (all market-implied probabilities, for market observation only, not predictions)[6].
The opening match is already listed: June 11, Mexico vs. South Africa at Estadio Azteca in Mexico City (renamed Estadio Ciudad de México during the tournament), 3 PM ET. Contracts go beyond "who wins," with sub-markets like "first-half win/draw/loss" [7].
How do these contracts change with match results? The mechanism is straightforward: each contract price floats between $0.01 and $0.99, with the price directly readable as the implied probability—$0.53 means the market sees about a 53% chance. As the match progresses and scores change, prices fluctuate accordingly; once a team is mathematically eliminated, its "Yes" contract for winning or advancing immediately goes to zero. Settlement happens on-chain: contracts run on the Polygon chain, use Gnosis's conditional token framework (a token standard called ERC-1155) to record positions, and rely on UMA's optimistic oracle to determine payouts after results are confirmed [8]. Each correct contract pays out $1; incorrect ones go to zero.
This mechanism introduces a perspective rarely seen in traditional sports media. There's a contract on Polymarket asking: Will any Mexican venue be relocated due to security concerns? Launched in late February, about 96% of the capital is betting "No," with cumulative volume around $116,000 [6]. Pricing "operational risk of the event" itself as a tradable contract—this is something unique to on-chain prediction markets. ESPN won't give you a "relocation probability."
Act III · Prediction Markets Are Being Incorporated
If trading volume speaks to "scale," several events in the months before kickoff speak to "this market being accepted by serious infrastructure and official bodies."
The settlement layer switched to stablecoins. On February 5, stablecoin issuer Circle announced a partnership with Polymarket to migrate the platform's collateral assets from "bridged USDC" (USDC.e) to "native USDC," introducing pUSD, a settlement unit pegged 1:1 to USDC [9]. The difference: bridged versions rely on third-party cross-chain bridges, historically vulnerable points of attack; native USDC is issued directly by Circle's licensed entities and can be redeemed 1:1 for USD. Polymarket founder Shayne Coplan called this an "infrastructure upgrade" [9]. In other words, the money in prediction markets now sits on a settlement layer of regulated dollar stablecoins.
Oracles entered. Myriad (operated by Decrypt's parent company Dastan) launched a suite of World Cup markets covering every match—over 75 contracts—before the June kickoff, using Chainlink's oracles for result settlement and real-time data from sports data provider 55 Tech [10]. Oracles solve a simple but crucial problem: how on-chain contracts "know" the real-world match results—via this decentralized system of data feeds and automatic settlement.
FIFA itself accepted it. In April 2026, FIFA appointed ADI Predictstreet (a prediction market platform holding a Gibraltar license) as its first-ever official partner in the "Prediction Markets Category" for a World Cup [11]. Due to U.S. CFTC jurisdiction issues, ADI Predictstreet cannot operate directly in the U.S., so it entered the U.S. market through Fanatics Markets.
Putting these three events together, the convergence becomes clear: before the previous seven episodes, crypto's place in soccer was still at "sponsoring jerseys and issuing tokens"; after those episodes, on the eve of kickoff, it has achieved—a settlement layer of regulated dollar stablecoins, match result adjudication by decentralized oracles, and even FIFA creating a new official partnership category to incorporate it. This represents a fundamental shift in crypto's position within soccer.
Asset Snapshot on the Eve of Kickoff
While we're here, a quick look at crypto assets directly related to soccer, as they stand on the eve of the tournament:
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Chiliz (CHZ, the blockchain behind fan tokens): Approximately $0.033–$0.035 (early June, multiple sources, slight variations) [12]
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National team fan tokens: Argentina (ARG) ~$0.41, Portugal (POR) ~$0.37; Belgium (BELG) launched at $1 on June 3 [12]
Conclusion · An Entity Not on the Sponsor List, Yet Deeply Embedded in the Infrastructure
It's crucial to strictly distinguish between two things: prediction markets (like Kalshi, Polymarket, following the U.S. CFTC's "event contract" regulatory path) and sports betting (following state licensing paths)—their legal classifications differ, which was the core of Episode 06. On the eve of kickoff, this regulatory line remains in flux: Massachusetts issued a ban on Kalshi's sports contracts in January this year, Nevada brought enforcement action against Polymarket's parent company (Polymarket has exited the state), Arizona filed multiple criminal charges against Kalshi; meanwhile, the Ninth Circuit Court is expected to rule by mid-2026, potentially diverging from the Third Circuit's earlier pro-Kalshi ruling, possibly pushing the matter to the Supreme Court [13][14].
The same World Cup contract can have entirely different legal statuses across different jurisdictions. Banned in some U.S. states, all forms of gambling are banned in mainland China, the path under the EU's MiCA framework is still evolving, and some countries have blocked related platforms. Readers must verify the rules in their own location.
After seven episodes, the on-chain figures on the eve of kickoff tell us one thing: for this World Cup, crypto companies are not on FIFA's top-tier sponsor list (where Coca-Cola, Visa, Adidas, and Bank of America in the banking category reside)—but they have already permeated this World Cup's settlement layer, prediction layer, and official partnership roster.
The World Cup kicks off on June 11. But the on-chain market has been playing for a year already.





