Prediction Markets Face Growing Global Scrutiny
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The prediction market industry is expanding rapidly, but so is regulatory pressure. Platforms such as Polymarket and Kalshi are increasingly attracting attention from regulators concerned about whether event-based markets should be treated as financial products, information tools, or forms of online gambling. As a result, access restrictions and legal challenges are becoming more common across multiple jurisdictions.At the same time, competition within the sector is intensifying. Recent data shows Polymarket's trading volumes have declined while rival platforms have gained momentum. Countries including India have moved to restrict access to prediction markets, and dozens of jurisdictions already limit or prohibit their use. The future growth of the industry may depend less on user demand—which remains strong—and more on whether regulators can develop frameworks that balance innovation, consumer protection, and legal certainty.
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Valve fans can turn a loading screen into a launch announcement.
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One Steam update later and the community already knows the release date.
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Valve says nothing and somehow everyone hears something.
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Steam users found a tutorial and immediately declared launch season.
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The hardware might not exist yet but the hype definitely does.
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Valve's silence remains their most effective marketing tool.
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The Steam Machine is always two weeks away according to someone.
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Valve drops a breadcrumb and the community bakes a whole cake.
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Steam users are experts at finding meaning in random updates.
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Nobody builds hype quite like Valve doing absolutely nothing.
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Every Steam update is a potential hardware announcement now.