On February 12, 2026, a special store appeared at 137 Seventh Avenue South in New York City’s West Village.
The store is called “The Polymarket,” with a sign below that reads: New York City’s first free grocery store. Built by New Yorkers. For New Yorkers.
Shelves are stocked with tomatoes, eggplants, milk, and bread. There is no checkout counter, and all items are free. This is a brick-and-mortar store planned for months by the cryptocurrency prediction platform Polymarket, accompanied by a $1 million donation directed to the New York City Food Bank.
On the same day, its competitor Kalshi had just wrapped up a pop-up event: distributing $50 worth of free food coupons to queued citizens at Westfield Market, with a line snaking several blocks and nearly 1,800 people signing up to receive them.
This isn’t a year-end charity gesture, but two prediction market giants, valued collectively at over $20 billion, doing similar things on the same street and within the same week, independently.
Source: X Twitter_Polymarket
I. The Strangeness of Prediction Markets
Prediction markets are inherently a barrier-laden industry.
They require users to understand concepts like binary options, settlement oracles, YES/NO share pricing, and accept depositing funds into a smart contract to bet on events such as whether the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates, the outcome of presidential elections, or if a game will be released on time. Even though Polymarket completed over $44 billion in trading volume in 2025, with a valuation of $9 billion and a $2 billion investment from Intercontinental Exchange, the parent company of the NYSE, its total user base remains under 920,000.
920,000—this is the follower count of a top crypto influencer on Twitter, but for a platform aiming to be the infrastructure of global prediction markets, this number is far from enough.
Where are the real incremental users? Not on Wall Street, where Bloomberg Terminals are ubiquitous. Not in the crypto community, which is already saturated. The true incremental users are those New Yorkers queuing at the supermarket for eggs. They may have never heard of decentralized prediction protocols, but they know that $50 worth of beef can feed them for two days.
When an industry is not yet understood by the public, the biggest enemy of branding isn’t competitors but unfamiliarity. The most effective way to eliminate unfamiliarity isn’t more ads on social media but letting someone actually touch you. Citizens receiving free milk won’t immediately become prediction traders, but the next time they see the word Polymarket in the news, they won’t think of some distant crypto casino—they’ll think of the store where they got their tomatoes.
II. The Divergence Between Physical and Pop-up Stores
The confrontation between Polymarket and Kalshi reveals two very different strategic choices.
Kalshi’s approach is typical of a pop-up mindset: renting a retail space, hanging prediction-themed banners, hiring part-timers in green hoodies handing out stickers that say “Kalshi loves free markets,” all for just three hours. This is Silicon Valley tech companies’ go-to viral marketing—efficient, low-cost, easily replicable.
Polymarket’s approach is entirely different. It didn’t borrow an existing venue but leased a store, obtained permits, and spent months preparing to open a genuine brick-and-mortar retail space. The official announcement emphasizes: this isn’t a temporary pop-up stall but a dedicated retail space built from scratch over several months.
Kalshi is competing for event buzz, while Polymarket is competing for recognition as an asset. The pop-up ends after three hours, the lines disperse, stickers are tossed aside. But a store continues to operate, a permanent Polymarket sign appears on the street corner, the $1 million donation is recorded in the annual report of the NYC Food Bank and will be mentioned in future charity reports.
This marks a shift from on-chain metrics to street-level storytelling. When regulators and public opinion review the prediction industry in the future, a donation receipt stamped with the city food bank’s seal will be more persuasive than any trading volume data.
III. From Conference Rooms to Supermarket Doors: Regulatory Battles
Talking about prediction markets inevitably involves regulation.
In 2022, Polymarket was fined $1.4 million by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission and subsequently blocked U.S. IP addresses, effectively withdrawing from the domestic market. It only began gradually returning to the U.S. after receiving CFTC approval in 2025.
But federal approval doesn’t mean smooth sailing at the state level. New York lawmakers are considering the ORACLE Act, which plans to impose strict restrictions on event-based prediction markets, even outright banning New Yorkers from participating in certain types of bets. Another bill requires prediction market operators to obtain a license from the state government to operate.
The core concerns of legislators are insider trading, market manipulation, and the general public confusing prediction markets with gambling due to incomplete understanding of the risks.
In the past, prediction platforms responded to regulation by hiring lobbying firms, submitting legal opinions, and explaining their technology at congressional hearings. These efforts are necessary but only effective within the regulatory conference room.
Polymarket’s current move extends the battlefield from conference rooms to supermarket entrances. Months later, when New York legislators debate passing the ORACLE Act, a letter from a constituent might land on their desk: Polymarket donated food to our community during winter, and their store is on Seventh Avenue, where no fraud or scams have occurred.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani proposed during his campaign to open public grocery stores across five boroughs to lower food prices. Polymarket’s free grocery store aligns with this policy narrative. It didn’t coordinate with the city government, nor does it need to. When a tech company’s action resonates with public officials’ proposals, public opinion naturally tilts in that direction.
IV. Trust as the Most Expensive Compliance Cost for Prediction Markets
Returning to the initial question: why does a prediction market platform go offline to hand out eggs?
Dissecting all actions of Polymarket and Kalshi, removing charity packaging, branding, and PR talk, the underlying logic is simple: ordinary people don’t dare to deposit money on a website they don’t understand.
Crypto wallets, private key management, on-chain gas fees, order book depth—these concepts are real understanding costs for a typical New York worker working ten hours a day. The higher the understanding cost, the higher the trust threshold. The higher the trust threshold, the more expensive customer acquisition becomes.
Offline grassroots promotion remains the most repeatedly validated, albeit crude, and effective method in human business history to solve trust barriers.
A decade ago, Chinese internet companies proved this methodology: downloading an app for a bag of rice, registering for an account to get a carton of eggs. Western tech elites once scoffed at this, calling it crude, unscalable, and unworthy of Silicon Valley’s branding. But today, videos of New Yorkers queuing in the cold for $50 food coupons are no different in essence from the long lines outside Chinese community supermarkets.
Whether blockchain or artificial intelligence, prediction markets or decentralized finance, all consumer-facing tech ultimately faces the same question: how to make someone who has never heard of you trust you?
Polymarket’s answer is a free grocery store on Seventh Avenue. The tomatoes and eggplants on the shelves are the most expensive customer acquisition costs in this industry so far—and the trust deposit that must be paid as it tries to move from niche geeks to mainstream users.
On February 12, The Polymarket opened its doors. That day, the temperature in New York was around freezing.
The store’s future remains uncertain. How long will it operate? Will it face inventory and rent pressures like any other retail store? How many of the citizens who received free food will eventually become real users on the platform?
These questions are important, but at this moment, they may not be what Polymarket cares about most.
What it truly cares about is whether, when the prediction industry someday needs to defend itself, it can produce a piece of evidence more heartfelt than “our technology is advanced.”
The $1 million donation receipt from the NYC Food Bank, the sign on Seventh Avenue, and the memories of thousands of citizens who received free milk—these are the chips Polymarket is currently accumulating.
Whether these chips can be exchanged for regulatory tolerance and public trust at a critical moment, no one can give a certain answer. But at least, this company has realized: in the game of financial innovation, compliance isn’t just a legal question; it’s a trust question. And trust is never earned in an office.
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