All posts by Travis Allen

Travis Allen has been playing Magic on and off since 1994, and got sucked into the financial side of the game after he started playing competitively during Zendikar. You can find his daily Magic chat on Twitter at @wizardbumpin. He currently resides in upstate NY, where he is a graduate student in applied ontology.

PROTRADER: PT Khans of Tarkir Block Constructed

By: Travis Allen

I’ve never been one for professional sports. I don’t know if it’s the toxic masculinity that I’ve never felt beholden to that is woven into the fabric of the pastimes, or if it’s instead my distaste for the veiled sycophantic jingoism that manifests as obsessive support, emotional and financial, for a team that owes allegiance to nothing more than your tax dollars. Whatever it is, I have a natural aversion to that particular brand of entertainment. I don’t watch ESPN. I don’t check scores. I don’t keep track of who is injured or what trades may happen. I didn’t even understand people’s exhaustion with Draft Kings and FanDuel until I saw ten minutes of a football game at my girlfriend’s parent’s house and was exposed to just how significant their advertising presence was.

LAS VEGAS - MARCH 19: In this handout provided by the Las Vegas News Bureau, the Mirage Resort Race and Sports Book in Las Vegas is shown crowded with basketball fans during NCAA March Madness Tournament March 19, 2010. in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Glenn Pinkerton/Las Vegas News Bureau via Getty Images)

Along with all the other things that I don’t experience related to professional sports is gambling. Of course, none of you reading this have ever gambled on sports games, because unless you live in Nevada or overseas, it would be illegal, so bear with me and just imagine it’s something you’ve done. Not having bet on games before, I’m unfamiliar with the emotional rollercoaster involved in the activity. Of course, I experience it in some capacity. After all, I bought $60 worth of Wingmate Rocs and Dragon Whisperers. While you could argue that speculation is gambling in its own right, it’s not quite the same. My hopes and dreams for Roc don’t live and die on one play of the game; there is no singular pointed moment in time that holds within it financial victory or ruin.

So when we did a fantasy Pro Tour draft this time around and I found myself sweating the outcome of Finkel versus PVDDR, a match that would determine whether I got second place or fifth, it was a novel experience. I found myself unwilling to watch them play, a behavior I know for a fact I’ve wondered aloud at when I’ve seen others not watch an event they’re financially invested in. I just kept working on the newsletter in silence, peeking at Twitter every thirty seconds for updates. When Finkel was finally victorious and I was locked for second place, a thrilling sensation washed over me unlike anything I get when a spec target quintuples overnight. All in all, it was an exciting experience, and it will be made all the more sweeter when I only need to pay four percent of a $400 dinner bill, rather than 14 percent.

Oh, also, Pro Tour Battle for Zendikar happened this weekend. Right. That’s probably what you would prefer to read about.

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PROTRADER: Blind Spot

Lately, all we’ve been able to talk about is lands. Lands and Jace, Vryn’s Prodigy. Expeditions consumed the collective Magic consciousness ahead of Battle for Zendikar’s release. How rare would they be? How much could they be worth? Would they look cool? Are they ruining Magic? Then the set released, and the questions changed while the topic stayed the same. Are they more common in prerelease boxes? Why are they sometimes damaged? What do I do when I open one? Are they going to rise in price or drop?

For the most part, these have been fair questions. Expeditions lands are attention-grabbing. They’re visually exciting, get the people around you talking, and they’re worth enough to often buy you an entire second box of BFZ. Of course people are thinking and talking about them.

At the same time, Fat Packs have grabbed a lot of attention lately as well. When players realized that fat packs aren’t print-on-demand, but rather only have a single print run, big box store inventory dried up quickly and local stores were raising their prices. Star City Games was charging a whopping $80 for them—nearly the price of a booster box itself.

Quick aside: First of all, “price gouging” only refers to raising prices on essential goods and services, and almost always during an emergency situation where markets are extremely localized. Charging $30 for a $3 gallon of gas in the middle of a blizzard that prohibits travel to other vendors is price gouging. Charging $80 for a Fat Pack with an MSRP of $40 isn’t price gouging, it’s capitalism, for better or worse.

I had written a whole bunch more about this at first, but it was discussed very well on Monday in Sigmund’s article and in the comments. Go read it there.

Alright, where were we. Ah yes, the basic land packs contained within the contentious Fat Packs.

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PROTRADER: Battle for Zendikar Weak Zero

By: Travis Allen

Tired of reading about this weekend’s SCG Open? Well it’s only Wednesday buddy. You’ve got three more days of it.

The first story of the week is Jace, Vryn’s Prodigy. Holey moley. On Friday night we were treated to #saitowayfinder, which is when Saito posts photos of tons of sweet brews for a new Standard format on Twitter. He first did it a year or two ago, and since then, I’ve seen pros explain their Pro Tour testing as “refreshing Saito’s Twitter and playing cube.”

Jace

What immediately jumped out at me looking through Saito’s lists was just how many copies of Jace were showing up. I remarked as such online, and thought to myself that I should really get around to picking up a set before they made it over $50. By Sunday afternoon, Jace had sold out, and as of Monday, he’s about $70 for a NM copy.

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PROTRADER: Combo for Zendikar

By: Travis Allen

There’s something sort of lacking this time around, isn’t there? It’s like the collective Magic community came in with this set of expectations about what Battle for Zendikar should look like, and the set has mostly failed to meet those expectations.

Where the original Zendikar had cards like Lotus Cobra, which at the time was discussed as dethroning Tarmogoyf as the green two-drop, as well as what were exciting cards like Roil Elemental, Oracle of Mul Daya, Obsidian Fireheart, and Warren Instigator, the new Zendikar has a three-mana sorcery-speed Lightning Bolt. Many of the cards feel like an extra mana was tacked on to the casting cost.

Is this Wizards turning down the power level on Standard? Quite possibly. It’s a disappointing place to do it, though. I would have much preferred Khans of Tarkir, a brand-new setting, to be the plane that brought the tenor down a few pitches, rather than Zendikar, a plane remembered fondly as one of intense power levels and exciting cards.

On top of that, the Eldrazi have been a complete miss. While the original designs were certainly not flawlessly executed, our memory of them speaks to their resonance: they were weird, unfathomable, scary, and eye-poppingly powerful. Sure, there were cards like Dread Drone, but we’ve mostly forgotten about those. Instead, we remember the home runs. The big three god-legend mythic monsters, plus Eldrazi Conscription, All is Dust, Spawnsire of Ulamog, and the stellarly named It That Betrays. This time around we get… an X/X for X? Two 10/10s for 10? A 4/5 for 5 that comes with 3 scions? Void Winnower is amusing, I suppose.

Oblivion Sower and Ulamog, the Ceaseless Hunger are the only two that are remotely interesting. Sower eating cards off the top of your opponent’s library on cast and then using those cards to further your own board state is wholly Eldrazi in manner, but he is sadly the only one to do that. Wizards did a decent job with Ulamog. His cast trigger is even better than the last time around, and his attack trigger, while not as powerful as annihilator 4, is both more fair and more flavorful.

Multicolor Eldrazi are just an absolute mess of text, and totally ungrokable. Ingest is buried in text boxes, and I saw multiple people fail to notice that creatures had the keyword because there was just so much going on in these cards. Even if those creatures end up playing well, they’re so wordy without being powerful that they defy any sort of emotional connection. We’re forced to evaluate them by thinking about them, rather than feeling about them.

Whatever. I won’t rag on them anymore (today). What I’d like to focus on instead are the doors that BFZ opens for other cards, particularly combo pieces. The original Zendikar brought us Vampire Hexmage, which jumped Dark Depths from $1.50 to $50, dominated a season of Extended, made Gerry T a household name, and got the combo banned in Modern. Scapeshift, a tier-1.5 Modern deck,  was also enabled by Zendikar block with the printing of Valakut, the Molten Pinnacle. Jeskai Ascendancy combo was enabled by the eponymous card in Khans of Tarkir. Birthing Pod in New Phyrexia made multiple value cards suddenly Modern playable. Amulet of Vigor turned EDH staples like Karoo lands and Azusa, Lost but Seeking into boogeymen. Mirrodin block gave us… all of Affinity.

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ProTrader: Magic doesn’t have to be expensive.