Binance Wallet has rolled out Event Rush, a 42.space powered dApp on BNB Chain that lets verified users buy and trade tokens representing real world event outcomes using USDT on BSC.
According to the official announcement, Event Rush is integrated directly into Binance Wallet and “transforms real world outcomes into tradable tokens” on BNB Chain, with users able to access the feature through the dApp section of the wallet interface.
The product is built on the 42.space protocol, and Binance explains that “Event Rush is where token trading meets real world events,” allowing users to buy event tokens on topics including sports scores, cryptocurrency price targets, and news developments.
FinanceFeeds reports that each outcome is represented by a distinct event token, and prices are set via a bonding curve that automatically adjusts based on supply and demand rather than a central bookmaker or external market maker.
Every purchase mints event tokens along the curve, pushing the price higher as demand increases, while selling burns tokens and moves the price back down, which keeps a two sided price available even when liquidity is thin.
Per Binance, users fund trades with USDT on BNB Smart Chain, can exit positions at any time before settlement by selling back into the curve, or hold through resolution to claim a share of the USDT collateral pool if their chosen outcome is correct.
FinanceFeeds notes that winners “share the entire USDT collateral pool, including value from losing tokens,” creating theoretically uncapped upside for popular, correctly priced outcomes while losers forfeit their stake.
The structure blends speculative trading and pari mutuel style payoff mechanics, since all stakes on losing outcomes are redistributed proportionally to winning token holders at settlement rather than paid out at fixed odds.
Binance states that Event Rush is available to “all verified Binance Wallet users” but that it “may not be accessible in certain restricted regions,” framing the product as a Web3 feature distinct from centralized derivatives even as it clearly enables real money betting on future events.
From a design perspective, Event Rush functions much like an on chain prediction market, but Binance consistently brands the product around “event tokens” and “trading real world events” rather than using the language of betting or derivatives in its public communications.
This linguistic choice comes as some regulators have started classifying decentralized prediction platforms as unlicensed gambling, with ChainCatcher pointing to a recent Reuters report on Indonesia’s ban of Polymarket for offering “bets and speculation on events that have not yet concluded.”
At the same time, Binance is clearly leaning into this narrative space inside its wallet stack, following earlier experiments with bonding curve based token launches and the Meme Rush feature that merged speculation and community driven assets.
FinanceFeeds highlights that Event Rush “eliminates the necessity for external market makers” because the bonding curve contract itself ensures a continuous price, which is a marked contrast to centralized products like futures where liquidity is warehoused by professional desks.
The launch also comes amid a broader push to use wallet level interfaces as distribution for experimental markets, echoing what Unchained has described in coverage of Binance’s Pump fun style bonding curve model and earlier bonding curve token launches.
For now, Event Rush sits in a regulatory grey zone between derivative exposure and entertainment, but by routing activity through BNB Chain and the 42.space protocol while limiting access to KYC users, Binance appears to be betting it can keep the infrastructure sufficiently “on chain” to frame the product as a Web3 event trading layer rather than a conventional sportsbook.
If that positioning holds, Event Rush could become a template for how large exchanges front end decentralized prediction rails, much as DeFi options and perpetuals have already blurred the line between on chain protocols and exchange style user experiences.


