How Final Fantasy Is Changing The Future

Let me tell you a quick story about my June 1995 experience, as a sophomore/junior who’d been playing for a few months. My local store (Last Grenadier in Burbank, forever next to the mall, RIP) had a box that they put five-cent uncommons into, and when Ice Age came out, I didn’t know it was going to come out.

I just knew that one day, that box had a label added: Ice Age in here! So I eagerly riffled through the cards, exclaiming, and then I saw it. Counterspell. An $8 rare from Revised, was sitting in the nickel bin! And there was another behind it!

I didn’t look at the rest of the cards, I just went to the register and gave over a buck for the 18 other cards and my $16 pair of counterspells, feeling like I was committing a felony. Then I went to my friend and said, “Look what was in the nickel box!”

He looked at me and said, “Yup, that’s a common now.” I felt the world shift, and then I looked at my stack of commons with new and disgusted eyes. 

That’s the feeling I think a lot of people are going to get as this game deals with the aftereffects of Final Fantasy. 

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Cliff (@WordOfCommander at Twitter and BlueSky) has been writing for MTGPrice since 2013, and is an eager Commander player, Draft enthusiast, and Cube fanatic. A high school science teacher by day, he’s also the co-host of the MTG Fast Finance podcast. If you’re ever at a GP and you see a giant flashing ‘CUBE DRAFT’ sign, go over, say hi, and be ready to draft.

Is The Sonic the Hedgehog Drop Worth Your Money?

Edge of Eternities is going to release in about a month, and the previews start Monday. We’ve already found out about spaceships, and shocklands, and at least one Eldrazi. There’s teasers and leaks and all sorts of things, but before we get to some Edge of Eternities packs, something else is coming up fast.

That’s right, on July 14th, we get a chance to buy a Sonic the Hedgehog themed Secret Lair drop. We haven’t been told if there are other drops coming with this, and while I think more is unlikely right now, I can’t rule anything out with Wizards these days. 

So let’s go over the drops, and the cards, and see where we want to put our money. 

As an overview, we’re going to start with the one drop that’s all new-to-Magic, and costs $10 more. The other two are reskins, and they are at the usual $30/$40 price point. I don’t know how much longer we’ll keep that price point as the base setting, as I fully expect Wizards to crank that to $40/$50 as the base price at some point in the future. 

We also haven’t been told of any bundle discounts or add-ins, so if they spring new information on us, I’ll update this post. For the reprints, I’m going to list the most expensive non-serialized version of the card, as well as the EDHREC number. Be careful with that number, because as you’ll see some cards that have been printed in Commander precons (maybe even more than once) are listed here because of the folks who take a deck and do budget upgrades or league additions, it’s not in for power reasons. 

Secret Lair x Sonic: Friends & Foes

I am a bit of a curmudgeon when it comes to new-to-Magic cards being sold via Secret Lair, and while I know Wizards has said that their policy is to make some Universes Within versions of cards eventually, they haven’t really done much of that since they printed all of the Street Fighter cards as Universes Within.

That said, the last few times they’ve done this, it’s been the Marvel cards and those have consistently done well. Those drops were new legend plus favorite cards, and now we’re looking at one $50 drop to get seven new and unique cards? Heck yes. 

The attention has all been on Shadow’s ability to obliterate counterspells by giving all of your stuff split second if artifact mana is involved. That’s a really powerful ability, and Rakdos decks really do despite reactive blue mages who don’t bother to play permanents.

However, most of the rest range from decent to outstanding. Eggman is causing or will cause everything ‘villainous choice’ to spike. Sonic himself is a great headliner for a themed deck. Knuckles gives a Treasures win condition to red, to go with Revel in Riches in black. Amy and Tails are okay at what they do, and Super State goes real nice into your most hated Uril, the Miststalker builds.

If this was $30/$40, it would be even easier to recommend this drop, but it’s still great value at $40/$50, and I will at least be getting the max of foils on this. Probably the nonfoils too.

Secret Lair x Sonic: Turbo Gear 

The Reaver Cleaver (DMC EA $13) – 124k decks – It’s a good card, and getting a premium reprint that should go well into a range of decks. However, to be widely adopted it’s got to be outstanding and this isn’t that. I think we’re going to see a big glut of copies hit the market and this won’t be a pricey card. 

Swiftfoot Boots (SLD bonus $35) – 1.72 million decks – I’d like the art better if we saw more of the character’s face, but I get it, this is is a pair of shoes that you had to have in a Sonic-themed drop. Some players love the cartoon look, others hate it, and this should be a middle of the pack sort of price. 

Myr Battlesphere (pack foil $10) – 113k decks – There hasn’t been a foil of this done in a long time, but the power of this card has been in making a horde of tokens on its own. I have a hard time thinking the demand for the singles will be enough to keep the foil over $10.

Hammer of Nazahn (CMM etched foil $27) – 108k decks – There’s a few ways to make your commander indestructible, and this is one of them. The cheapest versions are in the $10 range but that’s on the back of very few copies entering circulation. Plus, as I said with the Boots, it’s just a hammer and not really iconic with the character or the art. 

Lightning Greaves (Inventions $220) – 1.57 million decks – With 47 printings, including the memetastic Chancla we are getting in the Nuestra Magia drop, it’s very hard for a new version of this to break $20. I don’t think this will, but should be a solid $10 card. 

Weatherlight (prerelease foil $5) – 42k decks – It’s got to hit to draw a card, though it can only draw historic cards, though this is sweet art with two characters from the theme. Won’t be expensive.

Secret Lair x Sonic: Chasing Adventure

Generous Gift – (SLD Kitties foil $45) – 700k decks – This is perhaps the worst case of precon bias around. Stroke of Midnight gives a 1/1 and while it’s good to hit lands, that’s a big change on a creature’s stats. The kitties version is from four years ago, and this version, while cute, isn’t going to make a splash.

Open the Armory – (CML foil $4) – 130k decks – With Captain America, Cloud, and all the other Equipment themed commanders, this will be an excellent target for Dump Week, getting in cheap on a wanted card. 

Fabricate – (SPG foil $20) – 172k decks – There are multiple good versions of this card, and I think it’ll settle in the $10 range, given the number of copies about to enter circulation.

Deadly Dispute – (Fallout surge foil $10) – 368k decks – I can’t remember seeing a card printed this many times in a row, albeit with a sweet art/frame each time. Shadow the Hedgehog here, the FCA version coming out of Final Fantasy, and the Frank Frazetta SL that dropped a month ago. If there was just one, I would feel good about it. Three all at once means they all have a steep climb to being expensive. We might be able to get these cheap later too.

Unexpected Windfall – (Fallout surge foil $17) – 196k decks – A decent card, if you want the treasures, but only the low supply of Fallout surge foils made this expensive. 

Sol Ring – Too many to count, honestly. Has had 111 printings, and is the banner card for the format. I think this is a very cool Sol Ring, and as we’ve seen, there’s room for lots and lots of $15-$20 Sol Rings. The foils especially should look awesome, with how the ring is laid out. 

What I’m Buying

This may come as a surprise, but I’m lukewarm on this drop. I think the friends and foes is a great buy, given that many unique cards, but the other two…I don’t think I need to purchase the whole drop. I’ve written about Dump Week a few times now, and this drop is going to be an excellent time for me to put into practice what the data indicates. I fully expect the lairs to sell out within a day or two, and when people get their copies and crack them, I’ll want to target the Sol Ring, Open the Armory, and Hammer of Nazahn. The rest just don’t interest me and will have a hard time appreciating in value. 

Cliff (@WordOfCommander at Twitter and BlueSky) has been writing for MTGPrice since 2013, and is an eager Commander player, Draft enthusiast, and Cube fanatic. A high school science teacher by day, he’s also the co-host of the MTG Fast Finance podcast. If you’re ever at a GP and you see a giant flashing ‘CUBE DRAFT’ sign, go over, say hi, and be ready to draft.

The Future Value of Final Fantasy Commander Cards

The main set of Final Fantasy is out and being bought and sold fast. I’m not trying to keep up with much from that, nor am I interested in thinking about Standard until after the bans come on the 30th. The Pro Tour Top 8 being 4 Izzet Cutter and 4 Mono-Red, with Cutter being a huge metagame chunk, means that some bans are inevitable here.

What I’m thinking about is this: 

This Fallout version of Mystic Monastery, and the Dr. Who version, are both at $5+ in surge foil, and they are excellent examples of a phenomenon where the surge foils (or in the case of Modern Horizons 3, ripple foils) from the Collector versions of the Commander decks are the most expensive version of a card, or notably expensive.

Let’s get into the four decks, the cards they have, and which ones are most likely to gain some value.

Final Fantasy has four Collector decks, and they are themed in terms of art, mechanics, and even which Final Fantasy game they are influenced by, and each of the decks has all new art, even for the reprints. Let’s look at some of the cards that are new, and some that are reprints, but worth getting right now as people crack the decks and sell the singles. 

All of these are surge foil picks. There’s going to be waves of the regular decks out there, and if they pop up at Costco the way LOTR decks did, I will absolutely pick those up for cheap, but the plan right now is to focus on the surge foils as people are cracking decks for singles. 

We’ve got to talk about the special conditions around this set. In case you didn’t know, there’s a lot of serious Final Fantasy collectors out there, and these folks have really come out in support of the cards/art that depict their favorite characters or scenes. Examples include the FFX’s Farewell or Protection Magic, Tifa’s Lightning Greaves, and basically anything with Cloud, like Arcane Signet 0333, Dispatch, or Clever Concealment. 

Also keep in mind that these cards come out of decks currently going on TCGPlayer for $170-$250. That’s a big bite, to open up a set like this and sell off the singles. A lot of these decks either won’t get opened as collectibles, or they will get opened by people who want the cards for their own deck. We’ve got a glut on the market right now, but that won’t last long. 

This list is also focused only on the reprints. I’ll talk about the new cards soon, but this list will be long enough. 

The Dominaria Common lands (Geothermal Bog, Idyllic Beachfront, etc): The only other foils are from DMU, and these are sweet. They get more play in Commander decks than you’d think. I don’t think these will get wildly expensive, but if you buy a dozen at under $1 and buylist them for $3, that’s easy money. 

Arcane Sanctum ($1.50) – Important art and only one other foil to compete with, it’ll hit $5 before the end of the year. 

Arcane Signet (0334) ($7) – The 0333 version is over $20, but that’s showing Cloud with the Buster Sword, and frankly, that is some iconic stuff. Anything with Cloud or Sephiroth gets more attention from collectors, and don’t forget we still have one more FF7 game coming on PS5. This version is Tidus’s medallion (his dad’s tattoo) and is also relevant to the collectability. 

Archmage Emeritus ($8) – There’s no other alternate art version, and while it doesn’t have main character art, it’s got big demand for the card. 

Bane of Progress ($7) – The Commander Collection: Green foil is $16, and this is a nicer foiling. I won’t be shocked when this is the most expensive version of the card in six months. 

Bonder’s Enclave ($1.50) – It’s in 151k decks online, there’s no other special version and the chocobo art is not to be underestimated. 

Command Tower 0485 and 0486 – These are super underpriced for their art and setting, and should easily break $10 before too long. 

Cultivate ($6) – There’s other special versions, but discount Aerith at your own risk. 

Inspiring Call ($3) – The other surge foils of this card are all at least double, and this has Tidus and Yuna being adorable together. 

Jungle Shrine ($2) – The only other surge foil is from Fallout, and it’s $12. This only has flavor text from Aerith, but again, we’re gaining some serious value by getting in at a buck plus shipping.

Mask of Memory ($2) – Another iconic moment in the FF7 games, we’re getting in at half the price of the 40K surge foil. 

Mind Stone ($4) – Some versions of this card are over $10, and they are far less pretty than this is. I think this is supposed to be Celes, but it doesn’t matter. Magic cards don’t have a lot of gorgeous art like this.

Morbid Opportunist ($3) – Commander staple, good art, awesome foiling, price is far too low. 

Nomad Outpost ($2) – Feeling the theme here? Surge foil lands will get expensive. 

Path of Ancestry ($2) – I like Red XIII being on the cliff here, but I also love a special version of a card in 130,000 decks on EDHREC getting a special version so cheap. Dr. Who’s version is at $4, Fallout at $10.

Path to Exile ($9) – Another mega-staple, we can see that the Fallout version is now over $20 and that one doesn’t even have Tidus on it.

Protection Magic (Extended Art Foil) ($4) – The Surge Foil regular frame is $10 and this is the same art. When the sweet shiny version is so much higher, I’d rather take a flier on the same art and different finish. 

Pull From Tomorrow ($2) – The whole father/son thing with Jecht and Tidus is going to move some prices on mediocre cards like this. 

Rise of the Dark Realms ($10) – We definitely don’t get enough group photos, and this is art I’d love to have on a playmat. 

Seaside Citadel ($2) – Yes, all four of them are on the list of things you should stock up on. 

Skullclamp ($20) – If you think the sealed Commander deck can reach $400 (and I do) then this will be one of the surprisingly $40+ cards in the deck. Cool moment, cool art, Sephiroth connection. 

Slayers’ Stronghold ($2) – This is in a lot more decks that you think, and aside from the SL version that’s all in black, one of the only special versions out there. 

Sublime Epiphany ($8) – One of the themes we’ve learned in the past year or two is ‘don’t ever underestimate the waifu cards’ and this should be one of those examples. 

Swiftfoot Boots ($9) – Pretty shoes are also not to be underestimated.

Tireless Tracker ($3) – Almost every card with both Tidus and Yuna on it is already pricey, but this isn’t and I want to get a few copies while they are cheap.

Cliff (@WordOfCommander at Twitter and BlueSky) has been writing for MTGPrice since 2013, and is an eager Commander player, Draft enthusiast, and Cube fanatic. A high school science teacher by day, he’s also the co-host of the MTG Fast Finance podcast. If you’re ever at a GP and you see a giant flashing ‘CUBE DRAFT’ sign, go over, say hi, and be ready to draft.

Dump Week In Final Fantasy Is Here!

Two things have happened at the same time in Magic finance: First, the Final Fantasy Secret Lair drops have started arriving, and the phenomenon I labeled ‘Dump Week’ is happening. While those prices are going down, the premium cards from the main set are rocketing upwards and the Collector Boosters are matching the escape velocity.

What does it mean and what should you buy? Read on and find out!

First of all, let’s deal with the 8,000-gem question: What is going on with the Final Fantasy Collector Boosters? 

The simple answer is that we’re at quite a nexus for making prices go wild. All of these factors are contributing to the rise of $1,000 boxes of Collector Boosters. That’s $80 for a pack! Consider the following:

  • Global collector market, especially the US and Japan
  • Nostalgia through the roof, over 16 main games and oodles of other games over the last 30 years
  • Iconic characters in premium treatments
  • Allocations for CB boxes that weren’t as high as TDM, even though this is a Standard set

Put it all together, and you have things being scorchingly hot. We’ve seen the surge foil character cards go on a tear, especially the Commander cards that people want as the headliners. Cloud, Ex-Soldier from $150 to $600. Y’Shtola, Night’s Blessed went to $700 after being $400. Tifa, Martial Artist doubled from $200 to $400 in just a few days. The only one of the eight face commanders who is under $100 is G’raha Tia, and that has a single copy at $90, as of this writing. 

Those borderless surge foils are one in 267 packs to get a specific character, or 1/33 to get any of the eight. That is nearly three boxes of Collector Boosters, which might break $1300 before we hit July 1. There’s also lots of hits to be had at $100+, for rares and mythics, mostly for the borderless characters but there’s a Buster Sword and a little bit of Bahamut in that top tier. 

The Through the Ages foils are no better. Less than a week ago, the Stay With Me version of Rhystic Study was $350, and now it’s $650. The Sephiroth version of Atraxa, Grand Unifier went from $200 to $400. Terra Branford as Urza jumped $250, and so on. Not every one of the mythics has grown this way, but lots of the character ones definitely have. Note that the foils are Collector Booster exclusives, so stay patient on the nonfoils, which can be opened in the Play Boosters. Those will be specs when the supply has maxed out, and we aren’t there yet.

Please keep in mind that these Collector Boosters are lottery tickets. You are going to get your money back on not too many of these packs, though you will open lots of cool cards. I would advocate against buying these boxes and hoping to open some of the big cards, including the Chocobos. Just spend the money on the singles you want.

With the velocities on the rise this way, and the low drop rate, it’s hard for me to imagine that any of the chase rares go down at this point. We’re having a Pro Tour this weekend where Cori-Steel Cutter decks are more prevalent than many other boogeymen of past Pro Tours, but all the focus right now is on these meteoric risers. There’s loose boosters on sale at the Magic-Con, and there’s going to be more CB boxes coming as a result of this weekend’s Arena Direct event, but I don’t think that quantity would be enough to make a dent in the current demand. There’s something like 130 boxes/day being sold, and the total number of CB boxes sold so far (which is a WEEK of public sales!) is roughly equivalent to the number of Tarkir: Dragonstorm CB boxes sold!

Some of those CB sales are undoubtedly flipping, the same box being sold more than once, but still. This is velocity that we’ve never seen before. Lord of the Rings Holiday Edition CBs have gone up and up but it’s taken a lot longer to get rolling. Dump Week for these CBs was nonexistent here, but it started at its lowest point and it’s only gone up.

Dump Week is absolutely a thing for the Secret Lairs, though. Mine won’t arrive till next week, but they have landed for a ton of people and the undercutting is real. I don’t think we’ve quite reached max supply, but given where prices are at and how cards are selling, I’m not going to freak out if these fall another buck or two, and don’t be shocked if I pick these over the coming weeks on MTG Fast Finance.

Cyclonic Rift/Hope’s Aero Magic – $30 nonfoil/$30 foil – To me, this is an incredible bargain. A foil of one of the most powerful things to do in Commander, a Game Changer, and this is $5-$15 cheaper than the most basic versions of the card. Get in now while it’s cheap–there were versions that sold earlier today for $25 but all of those have sold out already and we’re looking at $30 tonight. 

Toxic Deluge/Merciless Poisoning – $20/$23 – The borderless from Double Masters is $32 in regular and foil, and this should climb up to match it nicely. I’ll be waiting to see if this drops any farther, but foils under $20 feel like a steal. Might not go much lower, though, with all things Final Fantasy being at max hype. 

Heroic Intervention/Aerith’s Curaga Magic – $15/$15 – The Black Panther/Marvel version is freely available for $17 in foil, but Aerith’s version, having a much more ‘magical’ feeling as well as her and Cloud on the same art, which is something that I can’t enough of with collectors going berserk. 

Cliff (@WordOfCommander at Twitter and BlueSky) has been writing for MTGPrice since 2013, and is an eager Commander player, Draft enthusiast, and Cube fanatic. A high school science teacher by day, he’s also the co-host of the MTG Fast Finance podcast. If you’re ever at a GP and you see a giant flashing ‘CUBE DRAFT’ sign, go over, say hi, and be ready to draft.

MAGIC: THE GATHERING FINANCE ARTICLES AND COMMUNITY