Google's Gemini 3.2 release is a closely watched milestone in the artificial intelligence landscape. This event aggregation brings together prediction market odds across five distinct release-date windows spanning May 17–23, 2026, allowing you to track how the market consensus evolves as each deadline passes. The Gemini product line represents Google's competitive response in the large language model space, and precise timing of major version releases often carries significant implications for AI infrastructure investors, cloud competitors, and enterprise teams planning their AI strategy. These markets are grouped because they address a single underlying event—the actual release date of Gemini 3.2—but each market isolates a specific date window, enabling you to identify the market's highest-conviction forecast and spot divergences in expectations across adjacent days. When reading the prices below, look for the date market that clusters at the highest consensus probability, as this typically reflects where informed forecasters expect the release to occur. Pay attention to the intensity of that consensus: a 72% probability on May 18 coupled with 9% on May 20 suggests tight confidence in an imminent release, while more evenly distributed probabilities might signal genuine uncertainty about timing. Sudden price shifts in any single date window often precede information spillage—press leaks, regulatory announcements, or analyst notes—that influence other windows downstream, making relative price movements valuable signal indicators. As each deadline passes without a release, the remaining markets automatically reprice, offering a living record of how expectations adapt. This aggregated view provides a transparent, real-time forecast grounded in incentive-aligned forecasters whose returns depend on accuracy.