Google's Gemini 3.5 represents a significant milestone in the company's artificial intelligence development, with implications that extend across the tech industry and beyond. This event aggregator brings together three interconnected prediction markets—all tracking when Google will release Gemini 3.5 to the public—organized around three key deadlines: April 30, May 31, and June 30, 2026. By viewing these markets together, you gain insight into not just whether the community expects a release within the broader timeframe, but when market participants most likely believe it will occur. The relationship between these three markets illuminates important details about community expectations: when the April deadline carries higher probabilities alongside moderate odds for May, it signals that participants see a near-term launch as realistic; if April odds remain low while May odds rise notably, the market is pricing in a delayed release. These patterns offer context for what traders view as plausible delivery timelines given Google's development cycles, public statements, and the competitive landscape. To interpret the prices effectively, watch the spread between consecutive markets. A narrow gap between April and May (say, 35% to 40%) reflects genuine uncertainty about which specific month the release will occur, while a wider spread (for example, May at 40% and June at 75%) suggests traders expect the release to slip further. Viewing all three markets simultaneously prevents overweighting any single deadline and reveals the full shape of market belief about Google's release strategy. As new information emerges—from official product announcements to industry developments—these prices continuously adjust, providing a dynamic read on how the community's expectations shift over time.