Drake's long-anticipated Iceman album has become the subject of intense speculation within the music and prediction markets community. These four interconnected markets track whether the Canadian rapper will officially release Iceman by four different deadlines spanning from April 30 through June 30, 2026. By grouping these related forecasts together, you can observe how market participants' confidence shifts across time horizons—a dynamic that reveals nuanced expectations about both the album's development status and Drake's strategic release timing. The structure of these deadline-based markets creates natural comparison opportunities. If the April 30 deadline shows significantly lower probability than the May 8 deadline, that suggests the market expects delays into early May. A sharp divergence between May 8 and May 31 odds could indicate anticipation of a specific mid-May window, while the June 30 market captures broader uncertainty about second-quarter timing. These probability curves act as a collective forecast of the most likely release windows. When reviewing these markets, pay attention to how quickly odds update in response to new information—whether studio updates, Drake's social media signals, or statements from his label. Price discovery in prediction markets often precedes traditional music industry news cycles, as participants synthesize multiple signals into forward-looking probability estimates. The spreads between bid and ask prices also signal market certainty: tight spreads suggest consensus, while wider spreads indicate disagreement about timing. Understanding these interconnected forecasts helps contextualize individual market movements. A sudden shift in one deadline's probability, compared with relative stability in others, can suggest market participants are refining their estimates of *when* the release will occur rather than *whether* it will occur. This aggregated view of the Iceman release timeline provides insight into collective expectations within the prediction markets ecosystem.