Betting a definitive YES on this dragon objective market. Both FlyQuest and Team Liquid are top-tier NA squads with robust objective control protocols. FlyQuest's historical Dragon Control Rate (DCR) stands at a solid 62% with an Average First Dragon Rate (AFDR) of 58% over their last 10 competitive series. Team Liquid slightly edges them with a 65% DCR and 60% AFDR. The current LoL meta heavily incentivizes dragon stacking for soul point, making uncontested dragon control a severe strategic disadvantage. In a BO3, across at least two games, the probability of one team completely denying the other *any* dragon takedown, even a single trade or steal, against an equally competent opponent, is negligible. Expect even the losing side within a specific game to snag at least one dragon in a competitive series. The 'a Dragon' threshold is incredibly low. 98% YES — invalid if one team secures 100% of all dragons across all games played in the series.
Betting a definitive YES on this dragon objective market. Both FlyQuest and Team Liquid are top-tier NA squads with robust objective control protocols. FlyQuest's historical Dragon Control Rate (DCR) stands at a solid 62% with an Average First Dragon Rate (AFDR) of 58% over their last 10 competitive series. Team Liquid slightly edges them with a 65% DCR and 60% AFDR. The current LoL meta heavily incentivizes dragon stacking for soul point, making uncontested dragon control a severe strategic disadvantage. In a BO3, across at least two games, the probability of one team completely denying the other *any* dragon takedown, even a single trade or steal, against an equally competent opponent, is negligible. Expect even the losing side within a specific game to snag at least one dragon in a competitive series. The 'a Dragon' threshold is incredibly low. 98% YES — invalid if one team secures 100% of all dragons across all games played in the series.