Loading wallet statistics...
Trader Overview
Kycper opened with a $31k deposit, ran it to $72k profit in under a year, and somehow maintains a 93.79% win rate across 900 trades — Kycper Polymarket trader just quietly became the blueprint for low-variance accumulation in prediction markets.
Rank #2535 on the Polymarket leaderboard. Whale-tier $41.1k PnL. The defining stat: 132% ROI on deposits with a 2.7-trades-per-day cadence across 884 different markets. Most degens chase 1-2 categories and blow up. Kycper scattered bets like he's farming inefficiency, not emotion. The portfolio value sits at $31.3k with 13 open positions still running — not panic-liquidated, still breathing.
Here's the actual edge: he buys at 0.979 (near certainty) and holds for the micro-move. Average entry price screams "I'm not fighting the consensus, I'm riding it." Buy-to-sell ratio of 28:1 means he's not noise-trading both sides. He enters conviction, exits on edge. The strategy is pure anti-volatility — take 93 basis point edges, stack them across hundreds of shallow markets, compound. Most Polymarket whale profiles look like they're chasing moonshots. This is just… math.
The best trade hit on Bengals vs. Ravens (2025-11-28) for $18.8k. The worst trade bled $18.8k on Spurs vs. Magic (2025-12-04). Those two almost perfectly offset — which tells you his bet sizing is pre-calculated, not reactive. Across 900 total trades, that's discipline most retail will never see.
The separation: 93.79% win rate on Polymarket isn't about being right more — it's about stacking positions where you're never wrong by much. He withdrew $41k while keeping $31k live, which means he already took profits before the drawdown trap could close. Low-risk profile, tight stops, zero hero trades. This is how you survive the prediction market grind instead of headline-chase into ruin.
Currently holding 13 open positions in markets nobody talks about. The risk is liquidity — farms this dry until exit becomes expensive. But the evolution from $31k grind to $72k total return on Polymarket shows someone who learned the hard way that consistency beats conviction in shallow pools.
whaleRisk: low