Kalshi, Polymarket and other traditional prediction markets differ from All Bettors in terms of their core purpose, currency and the way users participate.
1. Real money vs social play: platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket allow users to trade or wager real money (or real-value cryptocurrency) on event outcomes, and users can potentially profit if they are right. Kalshi is a regulated US event-contract exchange overseen by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), while Polymarket is a global crypto-based market where users trade on yes/no outcome contracts. 
All Bettors, on the other hand, is a social prediction and casino-style platform where players use virtual in-game currencies for fun, competition and rewards, rather than for directly staking or withdrawing real cash.
2. Legal and regulatory framework
Kalshi's markets are structured as financial event contracts and operate under US federal oversight. In contrast, Polymarket runs on decentralised blockchain infrastructure and has navigated regulatory restrictions in countries such as the US.
All Bettors is designed as a free-to-play entertainment product and is not a derivatives exchange or financial trading venue. Any real-value prizes or sweepstakes are provided under legally compliant models with entry options available to those who do not wish to make a purchase.
3. Target users and use cases
Kalshi and Polymarket attract users who want to speculate on real-world outcomes for potential profit. These markets often have significant trading volumes and prices that reflect crowd sentiment. 
All Bettors attracts users who want social gameplay, community forecasts and competitive entertainment, but without the legal and financial complexities of real-money markets.
In short, Kalshi and Polymarket are real-money prediction markets where people trade value on future events.
All Bettors is a free-to-play social prediction and gaming platform that uses virtual currencies for fun and competitive rewards.