Overtime Markets Review (2026)
Decentralized sports prediction market on Optimism and Base. AMM-style markets on mainstream and niche sports outcomes.
Overview
Overtime Markets is a decentralized sports betting and prediction protocol originally built inside the Thales ecosystem and now operating on Optimism and Base as its primary chains. Markets use an AMM-style pricing mechanism for most contracts, with parimutuel and order-book alternatives on select products.
Users deposit stablecoins, choose a market, and buy positions that settle automatically when outcomes are reported by the protocol’s oracle network. Sport coverage includes NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL, major international soccer, tennis, and UFC. The interface is crypto-native and assumes some familiarity with L2 wallet usage.
For US readers the combination of non-US regulation and on-chain settlement puts Overtime in the same legal category as other decentralized sports protocols: technically accessible via wallet but outside any US regulatory framework. For regulated alternatives see our sports prediction markets guide.
Pros and cons
Pros
- On-chain settlement, self-custody of funds
- AMM-style pricing means always-available liquidity
- Broad sport coverage including niche international events
- Live on Optimism and Base, cheap transaction costs
- Meaningful community and active governance
Cons
- Not US-regulated; legal status varies by jurisdiction
- Liquidity still modest compared to centralized sports exchanges
- AMM pricing can diverge from fair odds on low-liquidity markets
- Requires crypto wallet and L2 bridging knowledge
Frequently asked questions
Is Overtime Markets legal in the US?
Overtime is not regulated for US users. US residents accessing decentralized sports PMs do so outside any US regulatory framework; legal treatment depends on state law and individual circumstances. See our legality primer.
How does Overtime compare to Polymarket?
Both are decentralized PM platforms. Polymarket skews toward political and macro markets and uses an order book model; Overtime is sports-focused and uses AMM pricing. Different chains and ecosystems but philosophically similar.
What chains does Overtime run on?
Primarily Optimism and Base, with some historical activity on other EVM chains. Optimism is the longest-running deployment.
How is AMM pricing different from order book?
An AMM uses a mathematical pricing curve and always-available liquidity pool; an order book matches discrete buy and sell orders. AMMs are easier for casual users but can show pricing drift on thin markets.
Does Overtime offer live in-play betting?
Yes, on select markets. In-play depth depends on the specific sport and event.
New to prediction markets?
Read our full guide: How do prediction markets work? – a complete 2026 explainer covering pricing, platforms, resolution, and legal status.