Zoomex has rolled out a prediction market for the 2026 World Cup, letting users trade shares on match outcomes using the same order-book interface they'd use for crypto pairs. The product, called Zoomex Predict World, allows in-play adjustments — sell, add, trim, flip — as odds shift in real time. A companion Football Carnival campaign, running through July 19, dangles a $1 million prize pool that includes World Cup final and semi-final tickets, themed gift boxes, margin coupons, and futures trial funds.
What the platform offers
Instead of traditional fixed-odds betting, Predict World prices shares continuously, so traders can open a position on a team winning the group stage and then exit before the final whistle. The interface looks like a crypto exchange: order book, position management, the works. Zoomex says the setup is designed for crypto traders to "think like traders rather than bettors."
The World Cup campaign
The Football Carnival campaign started June 11 and runs through July 19, with rewards distributed July 26–31. Entry is free; users earn Lucky Spin chances by hitting cumulative prediction amounts, making daily predictions, getting picks right, and referring others. The prize pool is a mix of physical tickets, themed gift boxes, airdrop rewards, margin deduction coupons, copy trading insurance funds, and futures trial funds — all reported at a total value of $1 million.
Other markets on the platform
World Cup events aren't the only thing Zoomex is betting on. The platform's Prediction Market product also covers Trump, Fed interest rates, macro indicators, inflation, and geopolitical events. Some single prediction markets carry trading volumes in the tens of millions, comparable to mid-sized crypto pairs. Among the listed markets: María Corina Machado entering Venezuela by a set date, Russia conducting a nuclear test by 2026 deadlines, Fed rate cuts by meeting date, U.S. inflation prints, and Trump renaming ICE to NICE.
Prediction markets are a niche but growing corner of crypto, and Zoomex is leaning into the World Cup as a high-volume catalyst. The timing is tight — the campaign ends in two days, well before the final on July 19. If the platform sees strong user uptake during the tournament, it could prove the model works for event-driven trading beyond the usual political and macro topics.




