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GME Options Flow & Unusual Activity

A live read of GameStop's (NYSE: GME) options tape — net call vs put premium, the put/call ratio, unusual activity, sweep count, the largest dark-pool print and the day's directional lean — plus a plain-English read of what the tape is doing. Free, updated through the trading day, no account needed.

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Today's options flow

A sanitized snapshot of GameStop's options tape, updated through the session. The full contract-by-contract flow table, dark-pool list and per-trade Greek analysis live in the dashboard.

Net premium
call − put $ flow
Call premium
$ into calls
Put premium
$ into puts
Put / call ratio
lower = call-heavy
Unusual flags
today
Directional lean
bull / bear signal
Max pain
nearest expiry
Largest dark pool
recent block

Flow and dark-pool data are sourced from a third-party provider and may be delayed a few minutes, especially outside market hours. Empty or zeroed values do not necessarily indicate market inactivity. Informational and educational only — not financial advice.

See every print, not just the summary.

The full options-flow table with intent tags, dark-pool prints, per-contract Greeks and the AI situation report — live, updated through the session. Start a 7-day free trial — cancel anytime.

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How to read GME options flow

Options flow is the live stream of options trades on GameStop — each with a strike, expiration, size, premium, and whether it printed at the bid or the ask. Price tells you where GME is; flow tells you how traders are positioning and how aggressively.

Net premium and the put/call ratio are the quickest gauges of lean. Net premium is call premium minus put premium — positive leans bullish, negative leans put-heavy. A low put/call ratio means calls dominate volume. One nuance worth internalizing: heavy call volume with negative net premium often means sellers are absorbing the demand, not buyers driving it — the dollar flow can contradict the raw count.

Unusual options activity is flow that stands out from the baseline — large size relative to existing open interest, aggressive execution, or outsized premium. It's where institutional or informed positioning tends to show up before it shows up in the price.

Sweeps are orders split across multiple exchanges and filled at once to get done fast. A sweep signals urgency: the buyer or seller wants in now and will pay across venues to get filled. The aggressor side matters — for calls, buying at the ask is bullish; calls sold at the bid are not.

The highest-conviction signal is large opening volume on near-zero open interest. That's a brand-new position — net-new directional positioning rather than a roll or a hedge. When a big sweep hits the ask on a strike that had little or no prior open interest, that's the pattern worth watching most closely.

Dark-pool prints are large off-exchange share trades. Big non-contingent blocks near the lows can signal institutional accumulation; contingent prints are often hedging or arbitrage rather than a clean directional bet. Read them alongside the options flow, not in isolation.

For the structural price map that flow plays out against — the warrant strike, convertible conversion prices, max pain, Ryan Cohen's cost basis and the cash floor — see the free GME key levels page.

GME options flow — FAQ

What is GameStop (GME) options flow?

Options flow is the real-time stream of options trades on GameStop — each trade's strike, expiration, size, premium and whether it hit the bid or the ask. Reading it shows where traders are positioning and how aggressively, beyond what the share price alone tells you.

What is unusual options activity on GME?

Unusual options activity is flow that stands out — typically large size relative to existing open interest, aggressive sweep execution, or above-average premium. It often signals institutional or informed positioning rather than routine trades.

What is an options sweep?

A sweep is an order split across multiple exchanges and filled simultaneously to execute fast. Sweeps signal urgency — the buyer or seller wants in now and is willing to pay across venues, which is why large opening sweeps are watched closely.

What does net premium and put/call ratio mean for GME?

Net premium is call premium minus put premium — positive means more money into calls (bullish lean), negative means put-heavy. The put/call ratio compares put to call volume; a low ratio is call-dominant. Heavy call volume with negative net premium can mean sellers are absorbing demand, not buyers driving it.

What is the highest-conviction options flow signal?

Large opening volume on near-zero open interest — a brand-new position rather than a roll or hedge. A big sweep hitting the ask on a strike with little prior open interest is net-new directional positioning, the pattern worth watching most.

Where does the options flow and dark pool data come from?

Flow and dark-pool prints are sourced from a third-party provider and may be delayed a few minutes, especially outside market hours. This free page shows a sanitized snapshot; the full contract-by-contract table, dark-pool list and Greek analysis are in the live dashboard.

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