Polymarket is facing a backlash after traders challenged the resolution process for a high-volume market tied to whether Strategy would sell Bitcoin before the end of May.
The controversy erupted after Strategy disclosed in a regulatory filing that it had sold 32 Bitcoins. This led to disagreement over whether the sale qualified under the market’s original resolution criteria.
Several traders accused the platform of effectively changing or reinterpreting market rules after trading had already taken place.
Strategy’s disclosed Bitcoin sale led to disputes
The market wondered if Strategy would “sell every Bitcoin.” 11:59 PM Eastern Time on May 31.
After Strategy later a 32 Bitcoins When selling, some traders argued that the market should say “Yes” because the trade itself would have occurred within the stated time frame.
However, the market later proposed a ‘no’ outcome, leading to multiple disputes during the resolution process.
Screenshots from the market page showed the market was still being assessed, with the proposed outcome being challenged more than once before being finally assessed.


The market also included a clarification stating:
“Confirmation achieved outside the market time frame will not qualify.”
That clarification became the center of controversy.
Traders accuse Polymarket of reinterpreting the resolution criteria
Critics argued that the market’s original wording focused on whether the sale occurred before the deadline, rather than whether confirmation of the sale became publicly available before the closing date.
Willo, who claimed to have roughly lost $500,000 on the outcome claimed that the clarification materially changed the way the market would develop after the outcome became controversial.
Other traders also wondered why the market remained active when the interpretation of the confirmation timing had not yet been clearly established.
The market rules stated that:
- the primary resolution source would be information from Strategy and on-chain data,
- while a “consensus of credible reporting” could also be used.
Some users argued that the wording left too much room for interpretation once the timing of Strategy’s reveal became central to the outcome.
Concerns about predicting market management are resurfacing
The dispute has once again led to broader criticism of the governance and resolution systems used by crypto prediction markets.
Several traders referenced previous controversial market resolutions and questioned whether oracle and governance mechanisms provide sufficient transparency during disputed outcomes.
The market litigation process also drew attention to the growing influence that prediction markets now have as information and forecasting platforms.
The controversy also comes as prediction markets come under increasing scrutiny over the way subjective outcomes, clarifications and governance interventions are handled during high-profile events.
The polymarket market is still under final assessment
At the time of writing, the market was still under final review after multiple disputes over the proposed “No” resolution.
Polymarket has not publicly accused Strategy of providing inaccurate information, nor has the platform indicated that the publicly disclosed Bitcoin sale itself did not occur.
Instead, the dispute largely centers on whether the timing of confirmation should determine eligibility under the marketplace’s rules.
Final summary
- Polymarket faced backlash after traders challenged the resolution process for a market related to Strategy’s disclosed Bitcoin sale.
- Critics argued that a clarification added during the review process effectively changed the way the market rules were interpreted.
