Polymarket Voids $3.8M in Winning Bets Using Resolution Rules Added After Market Closed

What You Need to Know
- Polymarket voided $3.8 million in winning Bitcoin sale bets using resolution criteria added after market creation.
- Strategy sold Bitcoin before May 31 but disclosed it June 1; Polymarket required public disclosure by May 31.
- Prediction markets’ credibility depends on neutral settlement; disputes over resolution criteria threaten regulatory approval and U.S. expansion plans.
Polymarket voided $3.8 million in winning bets on a Strategy Bitcoin sale market by applying resolution criteria that traders say were added after the fact, a dispute that has drawn regulatory complaints and organized pushback from affected users.
The core facts are not really in dispute. Strategy’s own SEC filing showed it sold Bitcoin before May 31. Polymarket’s market asked whether Strategy would sell Bitcoin by that date. After Strategy disclosed the sale on June 1, Polymarket said the “Yes” outcome required public disclosure before 11:59 p.m. ET on May 31, a condition that did not appear in the original contract language. This is the specific mechanism prediction market traders call a “clarification,” and it is structurally the most dangerous part of decentralized prediction markets: the resolution criteria can be narrow enough to exclude outcomes that clearly match the spirit of the question. Polymarket has faced smaller versions of this complaint before, but the $3.8 million scale and the organized response under #StopPolyScam represent a different level of reputational pressure.
The platform’s credibility as a neutral settlement layer is the product, and that is what is actually at stake here.
Prediction markets are trying to position themselves as serious financial infrastructure, with Kalshi having won its CFTC fight to list political event contracts in the United States and Polymarket reportedly exploring a U.S. relaunch after previously blocking American users. Regulatory scrutiny of how these platforms handle disputes will follow the money, and $3.8 million worth of traders filing complaints with U.S. law enforcement is exactly the kind of paper trail that draws attention. The arbitrage dynamic the source article describes, where traders cross-trade the same question on Polymarket and Kalshi simultaneously, also means that resolution inconsistencies between platforms now have direct financial consequences for a growing class of systematic traders, not just retail bettors making directional calls.
Polymarket’s parent company has been in discussions about a formal U.S. market structure, and how this dispute resolves, whether through user compensation, a governance process, or silence, will likely shape how regulators view the platform’s maturity before any licensing conversation begins.
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