Counter-Strike is the most bet-on esport in the world. Whether you know it as CS:GO, CSGO, or its current form CS2, the game has run continuous professional competition since 2012, longer than any other esport at the top level. The depth of data, the richness of the market offering, and the frequency of events make CS2 one of the most genuinely rewarding esports for analytical bettors.
This guide covers every CS2 and CS:GO betting market available on Duelbits Esports, how the odds work, the research process that separates good bets from random guesses, and the strategies experienced CS2 bettors use to find consistent edge.
First, a clarification that matters for bettors who are new to the scene.
CS:GO (Counter-Strike: Global Offensive) was the fourth major iteration of the Counter-Strike franchise and was the dominant version of professional Counter-Strike from 2012 to 2023.
CS2 (Counter-Strike 2) replaced CS:GO in September 2023, rebuilding the game on Valve's Source 2 engine with improved graphics, refined mechanics, and updated sub-tick networking.
For betting purposes: these are the same competitive scene. The same teams, players, tournaments, and ecosystem. CS:GO became CS2, the professional circuit continues without interruption. When you search for "CS:GO betting" or "CSGO betting" today, you are looking for CS2 betting. All Duelbits markets for Counter-Strike are listed under CS2 in the Esports section.
CS2 is a 5v5 tactical first-person shooter. Two teams, one playing Counter-Terrorists (CT), one playing Terrorists (T), compete across rounds. Each round ends when one side eliminates all opponents or completes their objective (planting/defusing a bomb or rescuing hostages).
The match format is the single most important thing to know before betting:
| Format | Description | When Used |
|---|---|---|
| Best-of-1 (Bo1) | One map decides the match | Group stages, qualifiers, some leagues |
| Best-of-3 (Bo3) | First to win 2 maps wins the series | Most playoff matches |
| Best-of-5 (Bo5) | First to win 3 maps wins the series | Grand Finals, some semifinal matches |
Round structure per map: Each CS2 competitive map plays 24 rounds in regulation (12 on each side, then teams switch). First to 13 rounds wins the map. If tied 12-12 after regulation, overtime is played in 6-round sets until one team reaches 4 in the set.
Why format matters for betting: A Bo1 is the most volatile format in esports, a single map lasts roughly 45-60 minutes and upsets are frequent. A Bo5 is the least volatile, over 15+ maps, individual map upsets cancel out and overall team quality dominates. Always identify the format before selecting your market.
Navigate to Duelbits Esports → CS2 to find all available markets.
The simplest CS2 bet. Pick which team wins the match, including overtime if played. Settled on the final result regardless of the number of maps or rounds.
Example:
| Team Vitality | NaVi |
|---|---|
| 1.35 (favourite) | 3.10 (underdog) |
Back Vitality at 1.35: your $100 bet returns $135 if Vitality win the series. Back NaVi at 3.10: $100 returns $310 if NaVi win.
When to use: When you have a clear directional view on who wins the series. Most valuable on closely matched teams where the moneyline sits near 1.85-2.00 on both sides.
The map handicap applies a virtual map advantage or disadvantage to one team. This is the most analytically nuanced CS2 betting market.
| Handicap | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Team A -1.5 maps | Team A must win the series 2-0 (in Bo3) |
| Team B +1.5 maps | Team B can lose the series 0-2 and still cover |
| Team A -2.5 maps | Team A must win the series 3-0 (in Bo5) |
The critical insight: CS2 is the esport where -1.5 handicap bets are most commonly viable for favourites, because dominant teams frequently win their matches 2-0 against weaker opponents. However, two things make -1.5 risky:
Map pool: CS2 has seven active maps at any time. Teams ban and pick maps before each series. A dominant team on 4 maps might have a weak 5th map, if the underdog picks their best map into the favourite's weakness, the series goes to three maps even if the favourite ultimately wins.
Tactical preparation: Professional CS2 teams specifically prepare their opponents' pick maps. Even a heavily favoured team can lose a single map against specifically prepared opposition.
When to use the -1.5 handicap: Back favourites at -1.5 when: (a) the quality gap is very large, (b) the underdog has a shallow map pool that limits their map selection leverage, and (c) the match is in a format/context where the favourite has done their homework.
When to use the +1.5 handicap: Back underdogs at +1.5 when you believe they can keep a series competitive, win at least one map, but not necessarily take the series outright.
A bet on the total number of maps played in a series, regardless of who wins.
Standard CS2 line in a Bo3:
| Over 2.5 Maps | Under 2.5 Maps |
|---|---|
| 1.90 | 1.90 |
Over 2.5 maps means the series goes to map 3 (ends 2-1 for either team). Under 2.5 maps means one team wins 2-0.
What drives CS2 map count:
Predict the exact scoreline of the series.
In a Bo3:
In a Bo5:
Correct score markets pay significantly more than the match winner but require predicting both the winner and the series length. Best used when you have a very specific view on the competitive balance, for example, when you believe a strong favourite is so dominant that a 2-0 clean sweep is the most likely outcome.
Available on most CS2 Bo3 and Bo5 matches, this market lets you bet on who wins a specific map in the series, Map 1, Map 2 (if it takes place), etc.
Why this market requires specific knowledge: Individual map outcomes are heavily driven by the specific map being played. Map 1 is typically the picking team's strongest map. Understanding which team picks which map, based on the ban phase structure and each team's known map pool preferences, gives you analytical context that outright moneyline bettors don't have.
Map 1 market odds often closely mirror the moneyline because the picking team's preferred map is frequently their best. Map 2 becomes the team that lost the ban phase's best remaining option, the underdog's pick, making it the most likely map for the series to swing.
The most long-range CS2 betting market. Available on every Major and S-Tier tournament.
Example from the IEM Cologne 2026 Major:
| Team | Outright Odds |
|---|---|
| Team Vitality | 1.75 |
| Team Spirit | 6.30 |
| NaVi | 8.50 |
| Team Falcons | 10.00 |
| Others | 40.00+ |
Tournament outright markets are typically set well in advance and offer the highest potential returns for correct long-range predictions. They're also where the most significant value opportunities exist, odds on teams that have improved significantly since the market was set, or teams with specific tournament structure advantages, are often mispriced relative to their actual probability.
CS2 live betting is available throughout all maps of a match. Odds update continuously based on:
Understanding tournament tiers helps you calibrate how seriously to weight form lines and how much variance to expect.
The most prestigious CS2 events. Two per year, 32 teams, $1,250,000 prize pool. The Major consists of three stages:
Stage 1 (Challengers): 16 invited teams in Swiss format. Bo1 for most matches, Bo3 for advancement/elimination deciders. Teams with 3 wins advance, teams with 3 losses are eliminated.
Stage 2 (Legends): The 8 Stage 1 survivors plus 8 directly seeded teams. Same Swiss format.
Stage 3 (Champions): The top 8 teams in an all-Bo3 Swiss stage (a historic format change at IEM Cologne 2026, first Major to make Stage 3 entirely Bo3). Top 8 advance to Playoffs.
Playoffs: Single-elimination. QF and SF are Bo3. Grand Final is Bo5.
Current world ranking tier: Team Vitality (back-to-back Major winners 2025), Team Spirit, Natus Vincere, Team Falcons, G2 Esports, MOUZ.
BLAST Premier (Fall Final, World Final), IEM (Katowice, Dallas), ESL Pro League, PGL events. These offer Major-calibre field quality with slightly different formats and prize pools from $500K to $1M.
IEM online stages, regional qualifiers, BLAST league stages. More variance, less field quality, useful for finding value on teams in form that haven't yet been rewarded in the outright market.
At any given time, CS2 professional play uses seven active maps. The 2026 active map pool contains:
Ancient, Anubis, Dust II, Inferno, Mirage, Nuke, Overpass
Before each series, teams go through a ban/pick phase:
Bo3 ban/pick order:
Why this matters for betting: Knowing which maps each team favours and which they struggle on is the most valuable individual piece of research in CS2 match betting. A team ranked 3rd in the world might have a single map where they lose consistently, if that map becomes Map 1 of a Bo3 (because the underdog picked it), the whole match picture changes.
Where to research map pools: HLTV.org provides detailed map statistics for every professional team, including win rates per map, rounds won percentage CT-side and T-side, and head-to-head results on specific maps.
The most important pre-bet check in CS2. A stand-in, a substitute player replacing a regular team member, dramatically reduces a team's performance in a game that relies on deeply practised team communication, tactical preparation, and language-specific coordination.
Where to check: Official team social media accounts (X/Twitter, Instagram), HLTV team pages, and the official tournament's social channels. Check within 24-48 hours before the match, and again as close to start time as possible for any late changes.
A confirmed stand-in can shift a match's real probability by 10-20%. If the market hasn't adjusted yet, that gap is your edge.
HLTV.org provides complete H2H records between any two teams. More important than overall H2H is recent H2H, what have these teams done against each other in the last 6-12 months, and has either team had significant roster changes since those matches?
Identify which maps each team wants to play and which maps they want to avoid. The ban/pick phase determines Map 1 and Map 2, understanding this structure tells you:
CS2 receives balance updates that affect weapon and utility costs, map layouts, and movement physics. A team whose style was built around a specific mechanic that changed in a recent patch may be temporarily underperforming. This is less common than in Dota 2 or LoL, but major updates can affect team performance for 2-4 weeks post-patch.
Fatigue: Teams playing deep into a long tournament are physically and mentally fatigued. The third consecutive best-of-3 in a day is different from the first.
Historical tournament performance: Some teams consistently overperform at LANs vs online. Some teams are better on specific regional server types. IEM Cologne specifically favours teams with strong offline LAN experience in large arenas, crowd noise and event adrenaline affect performance differently team by team.
Prize pool and stakes: A team already mathematically eliminated from prize positions sometimes underperforms their technical quality in a dead-rubber match.
Bo1 matches, a single map, have the highest individual match variance in esports. A team ranked 20th in the world can win a single map against a top-5 team approximately 20-30% of the time, depending on the specific map and preparation. If the market prices that team at 4.00-5.00 (implying 20-25%), the expected value is neutral to positive over many bets.
In Bo3 and Bo5 formats, the better team wins more often. In Bo1, results are genuinely close to random between teams within 20 ranking spots of each other.
When a CS2 favourite is priced at 1.20-1.30 on the moneyline for a Bo3, the implied probability of a 2-0 sweep is typically lower than the moneyline suggests. The map handicap underdog (+1.5 at 1.50-1.60) is frequently better value, you're betting on a team to win at least one map, which at that level of competition happens roughly 40-50% of the time.
The half-time adjustment when a team trails 3-9 but switches to CT is the highest-skill live betting opportunity in CS2. CT-side historically wins approximately 55-60% of rounds vs T-side across the competitive pool. A team that started on CT-side and now faces a 9-3 deficit going to T-side has won the map about 30% of the time historically, the live price rarely reflects this accurately.
In Swiss-format tournaments like CS2 Majors, teams can face dramatically different difficulty curves based on their opening result. A team that goes 0-1 early must play harder opponents to reach 3-1; a team that starts 2-0 often faces easier opponents in their next match. Scheduling and path data from Liquipedia.net can inform both outright and match-by-match betting within a tournament.
For our latest CS2 tournament previews including outright picks, match odds, and format analysis, see our IEM Atlanta 2026 CS2 preview.
For a broader esports betting guide covering CS2 alongside Rocket League, League of Legends, and Dota 2, see our complete esports betting guide.
What is CS:GO betting? CS:GO betting (now CS2 betting) is placing wagers on professional Counter-Strike matches and tournaments. Markets include match winner, map handicap, total maps, correct score, and tournament outrights on Duelbits Esports.
What's the difference between CS:GO and CS2 betting? CS:GO became CS2 in September 2023. The competitive scene, teams, and tournaments are the same, only the game engine updated. All Duelbits markets are listed under CS2.
What is a map handicap in CS2 betting? A virtual map advantage/disadvantage. -1.5 maps means the favourite must win 2-0. +1.5 maps means the underdog can lose 0-2 and still cover. Most useful when the moneyline favourite is very short (1.20-1.30).
What is a stand-in and why does it matter? A substitute player replacing a regular team member. Stand-ins dramatically reduce CS2 team performance due to the game's reliance on coordinated communication and team-specific preparation. Always check lineup announcements 24-48 hours before any CS2 match.
What is the biggest CS2 tournament to bet on? CS2 Majors, held twice yearly, 32 teams, $1.25 million prize pool. IEM Cologne 2026 is currently live on Duelbits Esports.
What does Best-of-3 mean? First team to win 2 maps wins the series. Can end 2-0 or 2-1. The standard format for most CS2 playoff matches.
Where can I bet on CS2 and CS:GO? On Duelbits Sportsbook under Esports → CS2, available in all supported countries and payable in 13 cryptocurrencies.