South Korean police opened the country's first illegal gambling probe into domestic Polymarket users on June 5, targeting residents who bet on the June 3 local election. The Gangwon Provincial Police Agency is tracing cryptocurrency transaction records to identify users nationwide, who face fines of up to 10 million won ($6,500) under Article 246 of the Criminal Act. Polymarket's resolved 2026 Seoul mayoral election market alone logged $52.2 million in volume.
Why it matters
South Korea's move signals a structural shift in how regulators approach prediction markets: enforcement is migrating from platform-level ISP blocks to direct user liability, with on-chain transaction records as the evidence trail. Six of the top 20 crypto adoption markets in Chainalysis' 2025 index — including India (#1), Brazil (#5), Indonesia (#7), and Thailand (#17) — have now moved against prediction platforms through gambling law, derivatives restrictions, or user-level enforcement. The combined monthly trading volume on Kalshi and Polymarket crossed $10 billion in May 2026, up from under $5 billion in September 2025, putting the sector squarely in the regulatory crosshairs. Sports, politics, and elections drive 90%+ of volume on both platforms — precisely the contract categories every regulator targets first.
Market impact
The bear case is concrete: Brazil's category-wide derivatives ban and India's online money-gaming classification under the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Act 2025 are templates other high-adoption markets can copy. Platforms that depend on sports and political contracts for 90% of volume cannot strip them out without becoming structurally different businesses.
CryptoSlate