Bitget Wallet has rolled out a World Cup prediction campaign that hooks directly into Polymarket's prediction markets. The move opens the door for the wallet's 90 million users to place bets on match outcomes and tournament results without leaving the app.
What the campaign offers
The campaign integrates Polymarket's existing World Cup markets into Bitget Wallet's interface. Users can browse available predictions, place wagers, and track their positions all within the wallet. The company says the goal is to make prediction markets as easy to access as sending a token.
Polymarket's World Cup markets have already drawn more than $1.2 billion in trading volume, making them one of the platform's biggest events. By plugging into that liquidity, Bitget Wallet is giving its user base a direct line to those bets.
Why Polymarket's volume matters
That $1.2 billion figure isn't trivial for a prediction market platform. It shows how deep the betting pool is for this year's World Cup. For Bitget Wallet, integrating with a market that already has that kind of traction means users get a product that's already being used heavily, not something that needs to be built from scratch.
The wallet's 90 million users also represent a huge potential influx of new bettors into Polymarket's ecosystem. If even a fraction of those users place a wager, it could push total volume well beyond where it stands now.
Integration mechanics
Users don't need to leave Bitget Wallet to interact with Polymarket. The integration places Polymarket's front end directly into the wallet's interface. That means no separate sign-up, no extra wallet connection, and no switching between apps. It's a smooth on-ramp for people who are already using Bitget Wallet for their crypto.
The campaign is live now, and users can start predicting World Cup outcomes immediately. Bitget Wallet hasn't disclosed any specific prize pool or incentives beyond the normal Polymarket winnings.
Whether the campaign will push Polymarket's World Cup volume past the $1.2 billion mark remains an open question — but it's one that will be answered in the coming weeks as the tournament heats up.




