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Where did the funds go after the meme craze subsided? An in-depth analysis of the predicted market tracks and the top 5 dark horses lurking on the BNB Chain
Summary: This article will deeply explore how prediction markets are gradually consuming the attention left by Meme, becoming a new form of speculative infrastructure; as well as a panoramic interpretation of the BNB ecosystem prediction market. Author: Changan, Amelia I Biteye Content Team Meme is receding, and prediction markets are taking over. This is not speculation; it is a major capital migration happening now. When Polymarket obtained full US licensing and received $2 billion in funding from the NYSE parent company, you should understand: The Meme era of trading cats and dogs is over; the era of trading “truth” has officially begun. This article will guide you: Understand why prediction markets suddenly exploded; review the promising black horse projects on BNB chain; and teach you step-by-step how to proactively position and capture early red envelopes. 1️⃣ Why did prediction markets suddenly become popular? The moment market sentiment truly shifts is often not during a crash, but when it becomes numb. You will find: The “wild dogs” are still barking, but you are too lazy to click; the narrative is still flying, but inside you only think: it will all zero out in the end. Meme does not die suddenly. It dies from a structural contradiction: tokens are permanent, but attention is fleeting. When Pump.fun lowers the token issuance threshold close to zero, supply begins to expand exponentially; meanwhile, retail investors’ time, emotions, and capital are linear. The result is clear: hot topics become shorter, and slow declines last longer. At this moment, a new gameplay that looks “less exciting” but is actually more brutal begins to quietly absorb the Meme’s flowing funds. It’s called: prediction markets. 1.1 The more uncertain the world, the more people need the truth In this era of information explosion and fragmentation, media can often only provide timeliness but cannot guarantee accuracy. For example: someone used AI to forge a biography of CZ, which not only had a complete cover outline but was uploaded to Apple Books and other publishing platforms, even fooling media. At that time, the Meme’s market value of that book was driven up to three million dollars. Under Meme’s mechanism, speculators can get news instantly by scanning chains, but they are also easily the liquidity of rumors. Because in the “fast is everything” logic, the cost of verifying authenticity is too high; by the time you verify the information, the price may have already zeroed out. This is precisely the purpose of prediction markets: they introduce the Skin in the Game mechanism, forcing participants to reveal true expectations through real money betting. The logic is simple: Talk is cheap, show me the money. Prediction markets turn “cognition” into “assets.” Starting from an initial state where Yes and No each occupy 50%, participants vote with real money on information; the more buyers, the higher the price, and the real probability of the event is quantified in real-time by price fluctuations. 1.2 From “trading coins” to “trading events”: speculation upgrades The decline of Meme is fundamentally because: asset issuance is too fast, and attention runs even faster. When attention is dispersed, what remains are tokens that are permanent, and slow declines become normal. Prediction markets solve several problems: Clear settlement date: Focus speculative capital on the window when the event occurs. When the event ends, funds are settled, and there are always winners. Solves the problem of Meme’s slow decline. Friendly to speculators: Through clear win/loss outcomes, ensure that users can always get settlement benefits, improving the survival environment for speculators from the bottom up. More concentrated capital: No longer troubled by endless dispersal and same-name tokens, but focus attention on a limited set of important events. This is not just a change in gameplay but an upgrade in the dimension of speculation. You don’t need to be faster than others; you only need to be more accurate. 1.3 Regulatory breakthrough, institutional entry The rise of prediction markets is not only due to a good mechanism but also because they are recognized by regulators. On September 3, this year, Polymarket CEO Shayne Coplan successfully ended a years-long regulatory tug-of-war. Polymarket broke Kalshi’s long-standing monopoly in compliant markets, proving that prediction markets can break out of the “legal gray area” and transform into transparent, compliant “information derivative markets.” More than a month later, on October 7, NYSE parent ICE invested $2 billion, and prediction markets officially entered Wall Street’s view. This marks prediction markets as a new asset class officially settling into the core of global finance. The compliance breakthrough has completely eliminated legal concerns for institutional capital entry. Prediction markets are rapidly shedding the label of “crypto niche toys,” evolving into a financial infrastructure that quantifies global risks and public opinion, on par with S&P indices and gold prices. As shown in the chart, recent weekly trading volume of prediction markets has experienced an unprecedented exponential surge, with peaks exceeding $4 billion. (Source: Dune)) 2️⃣ Leading and emerging prediction market projects on BNB Chain 2.1 Kalshi: The brave pioneer fighting regulation head-on Before discussing prediction markets, we must pay tribute to Kalshi. If Polymarket relies on settlement, Kalshi is the one that tore open the compliance gap with direct confrontation. Before 2024, US prediction markets were basically in a gray zone, with the biggest uncertainty coming from regulatory attitudes. Kalshi obtained the CFTC designated contract market (DCM) license as early as 2020, becoming the first regulated platform focused on event contracts. Since then, in the approval of political contracts, it fought a prolonged battle with the CFTC: between 2023-2024, the CFTC once banned related contracts; Kalshi sued in court and won, ultimately forcing the CFTC to abandon the appeal in 2025. This victory is regarded by many as a key turning point for the legalization of prediction markets: it’s not gambling but a protected financial derivative market. The cost of compliance seems high, but it brings institutional-level trust and a regulatory moat. Kalshi is the earliest and most mature fully regulated CFTC platform, allowing US institutions and retail investors to legally and directly trade event contracts with USD. Although competitors like Polymarket are gradually re-entering the US market by 2025, Kalshi’s first-mover advantage and strict compliance model still make many see its value. But the price of compliance is self-isolation. Strict KYC, US-only users, operating only within the US “local network.” This weakens its connection with a broader global user base. 2.2 Polymarket: The first-generation king, but not the endgame If Kalshi wins in court, Polymarket undoubtedly wins in the market, with capital providing the answer in real money. This year, its valuation jumped threefold—from a $1 billion unicorn threshold at the start of the year to $8 billion (with a $2 billion investment from NYSE parent ICE), and recent rumors suggest it is seeking a new round valuation of $15 billion. During the US election, it carried massive capital bets. For the “2024 US Presidential Election” prediction pool alone, trading volume exceeded $3.2 billion. Polymarket’s success stems from dual victories in product and compliance: It downplays the “gambling” attribute and emphasizes the informational aspect. During elections, even CNN and Bloomberg cited its odds. It successfully established an authoritative perception, making users feel that betting is not gambling but pricing information. Compared to early prediction markets like Augur, Polymarket optimized user experience with minimal friction—no obscure on-chain interactions, settled directly with USDC stablecoin. It allows Web2 users to enter prediction markets seamlessly. It proactively settled with regulators (CFTC). This “fine” is actually a “ticket” to mainstream acceptance, clearing compliance hurdles and paving the way for US market entry. However, this compliance-focused, head-focused approach has a ceiling. Polymarket’s success is built on a high-control, heavily operational model. While safe, it is highly inefficient. Like a meticulous workshop, heavily reliant on official aesthetics and institutional funds. It performs perfectly for major events like US elections, but when facing more fragmented, high-frequency mass demand, this centralized framework becomes too slow and heavy. It has validated the “0 to 1” of prediction markets, but several core contradictions hindering the industry from “1 to 100” remain unresolved in its model. 2.3 The seven unresolved issues of prediction markets If we peel off the label of Polymarket as a leading prediction market and deeply experience its product, we find many critical problems still exist: