15 questions about GTA 6. Answer them all. Lock them in forever. After November 19, 2026 — see how right you were.
Everyone has opinions about GTA 6. Reddit threads are filled with confident claims about map size, story length, online features, and review scores. But predictions are worthless without accountability. That's what the GTA 6 Prediction Board changes — it forces you to commit to specific, measurable predictions before you know the answers, and preserves them with a timestamp so there's no revisionist history.
This isn't speculation or wishful thinking. These are 15 concrete questions with finite answer ranges that will have definitive answers within weeks of GTA 6's November 19, 2026 launch. How big is the map? What's the Metacritic score? How many radio stations? These aren't matters of opinion — they're facts that don't exist yet, and your job is to guess them as accurately as possible.
The process is simple: answer all 15 questions by selecting from multiple-choice options or adjusting sliders, then lock them in with a single click. Once locked, your predictions are final — no editing, no second-guessing. You'll receive a shareable prediction card showing all your answers and a confidence score based on how bold your predictions are relative to consensus expectations.
After GTA 6 launches, we'll update the board with actual answers so you can see your accuracy score. The most accurate predictors earn bragging rights in the GTA6Gang community — and proof that they knew this game better than anyone else.
Share your locked prediction card on r/GTA6, Discord servers, group chats, and social media. Challenge your friends to beat your accuracy. Come back after launch to settle every argument once and for all.
Strong predictions are grounded in evidence, not hope. Before answering, consider what we know from confirmed features, trailer analysis, Rockstar's track record, and industry trends. For example, predicting the Metacritic score is easier if you look at how previous Rockstar games scored and factor in the unprecedented hype cycle.
Prediction science has a name: calibration. A well-calibrated predictor isn't always right — they're right in proportion to their confidence. If you're 90% sure about something, you should be correct 9 times out of 10. The prediction board's confidence score rewards calibration over lucky guesses, so spread your certainty honestly across the 15 questions.
Be wary of anchoring bias. If the first number you see for "map size" is 100 square miles, your estimate will unconsciously drift toward that number. Try to form your own estimate before looking at the options. And remember: the most interesting predictions are the ones where you disagree with consensus. Playing it safe is boring. Going bold is how legends are made.