Weather forecasting represents one of prediction markets' most practical applications, offering real-time probability assessments for events that directly affect daily life across the country. On May 19, 2026, Denver's highest temperature will settle within a specific range, and this aggregated market group captures the full spectrum of likely outcomes across six carefully calibrated markets. Rather than asking simply whether conditions will be hot or cold, these linked markets partition Denver's weather forecast into consecutive temperature bands—spanning from 66–67°F at the cooler end through 74°F and above at the warmer end—enabling traders and observers alike to identify where market participants believe the most probable outcome lies. The advantage of examining these markets collectively is understanding the probability distribution across outcomes. When multiple overlapping markets exist for the same underlying event, their combined price signals reveal not merely a single point forecast but a complete picture of how uncertain the outcome is. If markets show concentrated conviction in the 72–73°F range with sharply lower probabilities in adjacent bands, that signal differs meaningfully from probabilities spread evenly across all outcomes. Each market's price reflects the aggregated judgment of participants making capital commitments, creating a crowdsourced weather forecast that updates continuously as conditions evolve and new information emerges. As you explore the prices below, consider what each market's probability indicates about the overall consensus. Markets priced near $0.50 suggest genuine uncertainty about that temperature band; those priced significantly higher or lower indicate stronger market conviction in that outcome. The six outcomes presented here are mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive—exactly one will resolve true on May 19, with all others resolving to zero. This structure allows you to read the markets as a probability distribution and compare them directly: summing all six prices gives you a snapshot of how confident the overall market is about Denver's weather forecast on that date.