No video has yet been made public, and reports of an orgy have emanated solely from news portals close to Fidesz. Nevertheless, some punters evidently consider it a sound wager to stake millions of forints on a third candidate’s path to the premiership via a popular betting platform—where, even so, the victor of April’s parliamentary election remains all but certain.

What we know about the so-called “orgy scandal”

On one hand, outlets such as the Fidesz-aligned vadhajtasok.hu assert that it depicts a homosexual encounter featuring the Tisza leader—who stands to become prime minister in the event of an April triumph—as an active participant. Magyar, by contrast, maintains that it is a covertly filmed recording, captured by intelligence means during a sexual act with his then-girlfriend. Márk Radnai, Tisza’s deputy chairman, told 444.hu that he had heard rumours of an attempt to link him to “some sort of homosexual relationship”—though he insisted no such liaison of his merited public scrutiny. We summed up the issue in a separate article yesterday.

It has since emerged that a private individual registered the domain radnaimark.hu on 30 December 2024. Yesterday, it displayed a single image of a dishevelled bed, captioned “coming soon”.

Péter Magyar orgy video
Screenshot: radnaimark.hu

No video has materialised there to date, but the site has gone dark. Providers are blocking access on suspicion of phishing.

Punters already decided about the 2026 election outcome

We previously noted how the Polymarket platform saw the majority backing Magyar over Viktor Orbán. A day after our report, Hungarian authorities banned the site, which remains inaccessible from the country under normal circumstances.

Péter Magyar online betting site
Photo: FB/Péter Magyar

According to 24.hu, Magyar still leads with 52 per cent, well ahead of Orbán on 43 per cent in second place. Yet a surprise contender has joined their duel, reportedly tied to the anticipated “orgy scandal” involving Magyar. István Kapitány—recently presented by Magyar as his chief economic adviser—has emerged on the betting site with 5 per cent of the stakes.

István Kapitány Péter Magyar Tisza party opposition leader economic energy policy
István Kapitány. Screenshot from Péter Magyar on Facebook.

Other contenders lag far behind

Notably, Kapitány outpaces party leaders: László Toroczkai of Mi Hazánk (the sole outfit with a pollster’s chance of independent parliamentary entry in April) languishes at 1 per cent. DK chair Klára Dobrev fares likewise, while János Lázár scores under 1 per cent. Orbán today remarked that Fidesz’s campaign would be led by him, Lázár, and Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó.

In yesterday’s post, Magyar hinted that any forthcoming video of him might have been doctored posthumously—but vowed he would stand firm and never back down.

If you missed our previous articles concerning the 2026 elections: