What is GGR in CS2 betting?
GGR is the headline revenue figure reported by licensed operators. It answers: "of all the money bet, how much did the operator keep before removing any expenses?" The math is straightforward — total stakes minus total winnings paid. GGR is useful for comparing operator sizes and regulatory reporting but is less relevant for affiliates, who typically earn off NGR. A state gaming commission reporting GGR figures will always be bigger than the corresponding NGR number.
Related terms
More betting terminology terms
Closing line
The closing line is the final odds when a market closes (at match start). Beating the closing line over time…
CPA
CPA is a flat-fee affiliate commission paid per qualifying new player. Typical CS2 betting CPAs range from $50 to $500+…
FTD
An FTD (First Time Depositor) is a new player who has just made their first real-money deposit at a sportsbook.…
Hybrid deal
A hybrid deal combines CPA + revenue share: the affiliate earns a flat fee per new depositor AND a share…
Map handicap
A map handicap gives one team a virtual map advantage in a Bo3 or Bo5 series. +1.5 maps means the…
Moneyline
Moneyline is the simplest CS2 bet: you pick which team wins the match. No handicap, no round spread. Odds reflect…
NGR
NGR (Net Gaming Revenue) is GGR minus bonuses, fees, and chargebacks. It's the revenue the operator keeps after removing promotional…
Odds
Odds express the price of a bet. Decimal odds of 2.00 mean a $1 bet returns $2 total ($1 profit);…
Prop bet
A prop bet is a wager on a specific in-match event rather than the final outcome — e.g. "will the…
Revenue share
Revenue share is an affiliate commission model where the affiliate earns a percentage (typically 20%–40%) of the NGR generated by…
Round handicap
A round handicap is a spread bet on the number of rounds a team wins or loses by, within a…


