The Mana Math of Magic the Gathering: Marvel’s Spider-Man

Spider-Man will be completely previewed by the end of today, which is two weeks ahead of the prerelease. I have to admit, the schedule feels funky, like Final Fantasy was ended a bit fast and Edge of Eternities has lasted a bit longer than usual, but with so many sets, everything is different from the times that used to be. 

This set has an MSRP of $38 for a Collector Booster, but on TCGPlayer, they are going for at least double that, on an individual or a box price. It’s also a smaller set, in terms of the number of cards, so they have filled the Collector Boosters with a range of treatments and styles, then given us an article with lots of obfuscations. My goal today is to break it all down and tell you have many packs you’d have to open to pull the cards you want. 

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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.

What to Buy From the Final Fantasy FCA Sheet

It’s hard to believe that Final Fantasy was officially released only ten weeks ago! We’ve seen the Collector Boosters get so expensive that the empty display boxes are going on TCGPlayer for more than $20, and I’m told this is a common thing for the hardcore collectors, having the empties of the boxes you’ve cracked open. 

Final Fantasy’s subset, Through the Ages, is a true home run, giving us very useful cards with some wonderful/iconic/nostalgic art. Doesn’t matter if this is not your cup of tea, there’s something here to enjoy and the collectors have come out of the woodwork. We’re told by Wizards employees that the print run for this set was bigger than any other set ever, and the demand was still too high. 

As a result, we’re seeing some cards start to dry up, and while usually I like to wait for six months or so to let a card find its bottom, when the boosters are this pricey, I can’t imagine these sink much lower before rising up. So let’s review the cards with the right mix of demand, current price, and low inventory.

For each card, I’ve listed the EDHREC data, but please keep in mind that it’s not a perfect set of data. EDHREC is both skewed to the most invested players, a very small group of very online folks, and those who do ‘precon plus some upgrades’ for leagues and other limited-pool Commander decks. I also want to remind you that per the Collecting article, it takes roughly 50 Collector Booster packs to get a foil uncommon from this sheet, about 250 for a foil rare, and a whopping 500 packs for a mythic. At $1300 a box, that’s just over $27,000 for a rare (most of this list) and $54,000 for a single foil mythic!

As the FF Collector Boxes stay at such a high price, being collectibles in and of themselves, the supply on these foils is already low, and there’s not much more coming into circulation. 

One more detail to note: James and I have spent a lot of time on MTG Fast Finance discussing how Japanese-language cards are undervalued compared to the English versions of chase cards. Frequently, the JPN price is half or less of the ENG price, but because so much of this set’s collectors just don’t care about the language, the JPN cards are often within 10-20% of the English price. If you like the foreign-language version, all of these get significantly cheaper. 

Command Beacon (317,000 decks on EDHREC, $19 for a NM English Foil) – This is one of the most popular EDHREC cards you can get in the FIC sheet, and also a bit misleading. Beacon was put into two recent Commander precons, and a lot of expensive commanders won’t even run the card. It is understandable if you don’t like the FF8 art, straight from the PlayStation 2, but we’ve already got a Galaxy foil of this at more than $30. Once these last few cheap foils are gone, we’re going to see this hit $40 or $50 pretty easily. 

Bolas’s Citadel (282k decks, Game Changer, $50) – If you’ve never played with or against this in Commander, just know that it’s a worthy Tinker target in Vintage Cube, and that’s a format with only 20 life! In Commander, it’s very easy to abuse this card and while there is a Post Malone SL version as well as a white border from MYB2, this is already the chase version at $50. 

Loran of the Third Path (205k decks, $20) – Another card with art that’s the flower of 2000’s technology, Loran is a tremendously popular card given the enters-play Disenchant and the politics of drawing extra cards. We also know that these collectors spend a lot for the anime-type art, so this just feels like a matter of time. 

Adeline, Resplendent Cathar (167k decks, $24) – The card is great, the art iconic, and the price is perfect. A rare case where the Japanese-language copies are a lot cheaper, you can get copies for $14! 

Sram, Senior Artificer (186k decks, $25) – The Commander is a draw engine for three types of decks, as well as being a fantastic include in the 99 of a lot of types of deck. We’ve had special versions, even serialized ones, and this FCA version will surpass all but the numbered copies. The art is perfectly arranged on the text, making this extra awesome.

Carpet of Flowers (104k, $18) – The SL version is already in the low $30 range, and that’s not even borderless or extended art. Even if the art makes no sense to you, knowing the game lore or not, it seems easy to see that this will grow to match and surpass that version of the card. 

Isshin, Two Heavens As One (23k as commander, #15 in last two years, 47k more, $70) – All-time confluence of factors here: Isshin is a terrifying commander in the aggressive colors, the aforementioned supply issues, and FF collectors love Lightning. I won’t be surprised when these are $150 by next summer. 

Jodah, the Unifier (24k as commander, #13, 17k more, $31) – There’s some competition in here, as we got the Spongebob Jodah not long before this was released, but the art is by Amano, and some people don’t like the bright cartoon colors. Jodah should break the top ten commanders over time, as it’s just an excuse to play all your favorite legendary creatures. 

Gix, Yawgmoth Praetor (51k, $34) – All the other mythics from FCA are super-pricey but this one is surprisingly affordable. Gix sees less play than the others, and buying in on this is more of a supply spec than anything else. 

Muldrotha, the Gravetide (20k decks, #24, 58k more, $12) – Top graveyard-based commander, great art. There are other borderless versions out there, including a Fracture Foil from Foundations, but this is still a great price for a very collectible version. 

I don’t think you need to buy any of these immediately, but I wouldn’t wait too long. Most of them have already rebounded off of lows, and as the CBs rise in price, these cards should get harder and harder to find. 

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.

Playing With A New Set Of Rules

I’ve been making a lot of posts lately, mainly in the ProTrader Discord, that come down to one thing: Final Fantasy was the harbinger of change. There is a before and there is an after, and just as we needed to adapt in COVID times, and adapt post-pandemic, now we need to look at what is happening with an impartial eye.

We’re not here to talk about the morality of the new reign, or the unfairness, or anything else that is as useful as an ‘old man shakes fist at cloud’ meme. We’re being clear and concise about what’s happening now in Magic and what it means going forward. 

Before we go too deep, let’s take a beat and review a little history, so we can see where we are at. 

We have to start with Universes Beyond: The Lord of the Rings. This set dropped in June of 2023, and was known to have the serialized Rings, a Realms and Relics subset, and also a special Holiday release with its own Showcase art, the 60’s poster treatment, and even more serialized cards. 

This was the first true Universes Beyond full set, as before, we’d only gotten little glimpses of this world. A Secret Lair, a subset of cards like Transformers done inside of a regular set, that was as far as we had gone.

LOTR was the first time that Magic players intersected with another big fandom, and since Magic’s appeal has generally been as a game, not as its own lore, the ‘collector’ aspect of the game kicked in hard. We had the 1/1 The One Ring sell for $2 million US, a record which was eclipsed last May by a 10.0 Pristine Alpha Black Lotus that went for $3 million. 

Lord of the Rings as a set, was handled almost perfectly. The biggest flaw was that the surge foil Realms and Relics went from super-mega-rare in the original Collector Boosters and then they were close to 10x easier to pull in the Holiday edition. That’s the only blemish here. And ever since those Holiday packs came out in late 2023, they’ve done nothing but go up in price. They were $350/box on release, then by the following July they were pushing $500. At one year old, in late 2024, they’d broken past the $1000 mark, and thanks in part to a lot of sales at Black Friday, it was $1500 at the start of 2025. Currently, the cost for a Holiday edition box is $2400, and the regular LOTR is at a grand.

The next inkling we had of things being different was last November, when the Marvel Secret Lairs dropped, and had mechanically unique cards in them, and good ones at that. The Secret Lair site went down and was back up and then restarted, with some server patches that ravenous fans got through. We’d seen popular things–we’d never crashed the whole damn endeavor.

And that leads us to a team–up that seemed wildly unlikely. Final Fantasy already has a whole card game, with lots of expansions and its own market! The nostalgia was too strong, and the FF collecting whales went for the Surge foils first, new depictions of beloved characters. Those went up in price fast, and the Collector Boosters they came from followed suit, buoyed by the astronomical prices of the Neon Chocobos. 

Collector Booster boxes for Final Fantasy had an MSRP of $450, which is the same as a Modern Horizons set. This stayed consistent for a bit but as soon as the collectors kicked in, the prices started going up and they did not stop. When individuals were able to sell their own boxes, the supply dipped a little and then started to climb. We’re at $1400 and past lots of predictions, but here’s the real issue: Anyone who sold a box at close to MSRP was losing out on something like 100% profit, and now anyone who could buy at MSRP would be able to resell for mega profits.

As a result, Magic has attracted the attention of the networks of folks who are trained to buy MSRP on sight and expect immediate profits. Their business model is about speed, exploiting botnets and other programs that find available inventory and buy it instantly. Pokemon and sneakers are the most common uses here, but concerts have this problem too. And let’s face it: We would buy Final Fantasy at MSRP instantly too. 

Wizards has noticed the changes in behavior too, and Collector Booster boxes for the next Universes Beyond sets (Spider-Man and Avatar: the Last Airbender) are starting out at much higher prices, to the dismay of folks who want to get those packs for cheaper. 

So where are we now?

First of all, the prices of the regular singles are not heavily impacted yet. Nonfoils in the regular frame for FIN and EOE both remain in the range of where other sets were at this point, with perhaps the exception of Starting Town, which spiked a lot earlier than I expected. While the special versions are getting crazy expensive, the regulars are fine. 

Please remember that the panic currently overtaking folks is all about special shiny versions. Regulars, and regular foils, are still not difficult to find. 

Also, we need to keep in mind that Wizards wants the profit too. Once the distributor gets the product, Wizards doesn’t make any more money. So they are going to set that price higher whenever they think the market will bear it. Up to this point, that’s meant the Horizons sets or reprint sets stuffed with value. Now, though, we’re seeing some reaction from them and they are making more money per box. 

The scary thing is, there’s nothing in the future that should slow this down. The ‘regular’ Magic sets might be a blip, but the presence of an Infinity Gauntlet means big-time Marvel crossovers. We’re already seeing Spider-Man variants with classic comic book covers, and those sorts of collectibles have lots of crossover appeal.

Finally, the bots and such should be a fixture of life online for the foreseeable future. As long as there’s profit to be made in being the first to buy out someone who lists an Avatar CBB at $600, there will be scrapers and crawlers flagging and buying faster than humans can click links. This will keep happening until a) technology to block the bots arises or b) there’s no longer profit to be made. I don’t know when (if) either of those things will happen.

The one good thing I can see here is that the folks running bots aren’t looking to do anything but instantly flip. We are seeing some impressive lows for the Final Fantasy SL cards, and I’m looking forward to buying plenty of the recent FIAB promos as well. Even if something sells out online, you’ll usually have chances to get singles at decent prices.

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.

Fracture Foils, First-Place Gold, and the Tragedy of Aetherdrift

We’re six months past the release of Aetherdrift, and that set is commonly given the side-eye as being one of the weakest sets in recent memory, both in terms of impact and finances.

So that means there’s a lot of potential value, as folks don’t bother to open or use the cards. 

Today, I want to look at the set, its chase treatments, evaluate use-cases, and see what I want to pick up in anticipation of future gains.

Fracture Foils are a treatment that has proven to be very popular, depending on the card and art. They’ve shown up in three sets so far: Foundations, Aetherdrift, and Duskmourn: House of Horror. Outlaws of Thunder Junction went for raised foils as part of the OTP bonus sheet, and we’ll come back to that. Each of the Fracture Foil sets have had cards show up in English and in Japanese-language, even if you’re opening English packs. In order to get a specific English Fracture Foil in DSK, you’d need roughly 1,428 Collector Booster packs. That number is 1,515 for Foundations, and the same 1,515 packs for Aetherdrift. These are tough to open on their own. 

However, the rarity is not the only factor at play here. The card needs demand, either from being amazing art, amazing card, mega-staple, or some combination thereof. Here’s the prices for all the Fracture Foils, TCG Low as of this weekend:

FoundationsDuskmourn: House of HorrorsAetherdrift
Kaito, Cunning Infiltrator$76.71Overlord of the Boilerbilges$56.94Explosive Getaway$19.89
Day of Judgment$89.82Overlord of the Floodpits$67.53Salvation Engine$32.71
Think Twice$99.92Overlord of the Mistmoors$83.55Spectacular Pileup$36.29
Progenitus$144.89Enduring Innocence$94.17Mimeoplasm, Revered One$51.29
Herald of Eternal Dawn$172.28Enduring Courage$95.25March of the World Ooze$58.79
Muldrotha, the Gravetide$259.06Enduring Tenacity$100.22Mu Yanling, Wind Rider$67.95
Bloodthirsty Conqueror$312.83Enduring Curiosity$154.83Cursecloth Wrappings$70.60
Twinflame Tyrant$498.45Overlord of the Hauntwoods$172.31Chandra, Spark Hunter$116.77
Doubling Season$515.09Overlord of the Balemurk$173.04Loot, the Pathfinder$163.07
Llanowar Elves$663.78Enduring Vitality$240.79Radiant Lotus$170.73

Foundations is the only one of these three that has reprints, but this isn’t just about the reprints. Twinflame Tyrant is in about 73k decks on EDHREC, but it’s a Dragon and we know how much people love our scaly overlords. (I run the meetings on Wednesdays!) Enduring Vitality is in 50k more decks and it is about half the price. All five of the Enduring creatures, being value engines, are in at least 68,000 decks each, but four of the five have lower prices than Progenitus, a card who sees play with Cubes and only 15,000 Commander decks total. 

I’m looking at these price lists and I’m thinking that we are seeing opportunity. Nothing on the agenda right now is making these cards spike, but there’s a whole lot that could go off. Cursecloth is waiting for a Zombie deck, as an example. These cards are underpriced considering how difficult it is to pull one. These Aetherdrift Fracture Foils are not even falling victim to the yellow problem, this is just reflective of a belief that nothing in the set is worth money…so nothing in the set is worth money.

There’s another subset of hard-to-get cards in Aetherdrift: The first-place foils and the borderless first-place foils. These were only found in the Box Topper packs, and you get exactly one per Play Booster Box, Collector Booster Box, and the Finish Line Bundle. Let’s go over how tough those are to pull from Box Topper packs:

Category (# of cards)Percent chance to get any card of that typePercent chance to get a specific card of that typeNumber of Box Topper packs needed (approx.)
DFT First-Place Foil Main Set Rare (60)69.40%1.16%86.46
DFT First-Place Foil Main Set Mythic Rare (20)11.60%0.58%172.41
DFT First-Place Foil Borderless Rude Rider Rare(13)7.50%0.58%173.33
DFT First-Place Foil Borderless Revved Up Rider Rare(11)6.40%0.58%171.88
DFT First-Place Foil Borderless Graffiti Giants Mythic Rare (8)2.30%0.29%347.83
DFT First-Place Foil Borderless Revved Up Rider Mythic Rare (4)1.10%0.28%363.64
DFT First-Place Foil Borderless Rude Rider Mythic Rare (1)0.30%0.30%333.33
DFT First-Place Foil Special Guest (10)1.40%0.14%714.29

We don’t know the ratio of bundles sold vs. CB boxes and Play boxes, so we can’t estimate the relative costs for each copy of a card, but it’s surely not cheap. The Special Guests especially are incredibly difficult to snag, but only Chrome Mox at $450 is above a price tag of $100 for any of these rarities or treatments. That’s way out there, and not the prices I would have expected. We’re in an era where Final Fantasy has brought in a ton of new collectors, with lots of Collector Booster boxes rising in price but Aetherdrift staying stubbornly cheap. 

The big issue here is the same thing haunting the textured foils from the OTP set: The cards don’t look terribly appealing. 

To be clear, the pictures on Gatherer and TCGPlayer are mustard-yellow, and being borderless, that makes for a LOT of the yellow color:

This is a difficult thing to want to spend money on, if it looks this much like a hot dog topping. If they’d gone for some other color, they might have had better luck, but making everything yellow also makes the color identity of the card much more difficult, something that is hard to grasp until you play with these cards and see how they look in person:

There’s no other word for it: These cards are ugly. Doesn’t mean they can’t get expensive, just means that they aren’t right now. 

With that in mind, though, there’s a couple of cards from DFT’s rarest pulls that are worth considering:

Bloodghast ($9, 84k on EDHREC) – The Secret Lair version of this card, from one of the very first Lairs six years ago and only in nonfoil, is at $11, or you can get this for $9. It’s a card that has an infinite combo with Perilous Forays and if you’re willing to go to three-card combos there’s plenty of those around. It’s in plenty of decks, and is incredibly a Vampire if you want those synergies. 

Lord of the Undead (34k decks) – The only thing that does this justice is a comparison of the regular SPG and the First-Place SPG:

The yellow one is $55. The regular foil is $9. Both are worth it for the next time Zombies get popular, as this is just cool art. 

Salvation Engine is the most popular Fracture Foil from DFT on EDHREC, and I think it’s worth picking up. It’s a plus-two anthem for artifact creatures, and if you have six power of creatures (a 4/4 or two 1/1 artifacts can do it) then you can get an attack and return something to play. That’s a pretty great set of abilities in a single card.

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