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My Predictions for 2026, The Likely And The Random

I do plenty of speculating on Magic. Mostly I stick to cards, and I do well on figuring out themes ahead of time too. But today, I want to get more and more out there with some things that could happen with Magic, and I’ll rank them in order from least likely to most likely. 

Please feel free to chime in with your takes, in the comments, on social media, or in the ProTrader Discord server.

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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 an event and you see a giant flashing ‘CUBE DRAFT’ sign, go over, say hi, and be ready to draft.

What I Speculated On In 2025 & Why I Did It

I don’t buy a lot of singles during most years, and 2025 was no exception. Today, I want to go over the singles I did buy for spec purposes, the price I got in at, my thought process, and what they’ve done so far. 

If you’d like a comprehensive review of all my picks from MTG Fast Finance, tune in for that podcast episode, coming after the first of the year. This list of purchases is just me, though I know I’ve mentioned these cards in articles, or Discord posts, or in other areas. Generally speaking, I don’t like to do a lot of buying of the things I suggest as specs, because in a lot of cases, it’s going to directly result in me selling my early buys to people who listen to my advice, and the self-dealing would be rampant. 

So let’s go over the singles I thought were worth the investment. 

I do want to note that I’m only focusing on singles here. I’m skipping where the majority of my money went this year: sealed product via MTGPrice Group Buys and Secret Lairs on release day. If you’re a ProTrader, you get access to some fantastic group buy pricing, and I’d strongly suggest you sign up. I’ve also been able to do well with getting SL drops early and reselling them for good profits, but those aren’t what I want to focus on today. 

So here’s my picks, in order. I’ve included the tax I paid (10%, ouch) and the shipping in my per-card cost.

February 2: 29x Foil Borderless Rooftop Storm, $3.50 each

This was allllllll the way back at the start of the year, when the Innistrad Remastered set came out and we also got a fresh batch of Zombie goodness, mostly focused on Hashaton. Rooftop Storm is one of the most busted Kindred cards around, and this was available at a surprisingly low price. That price went up while Zombies were getting all the attention, but even though INR had a sort of truncated print run, there’s still a whole lot of copies out there and the price has trailed downwards, with NM foils being at about the same price as when I bought in.

February 11: 3x Borderless Foil Jeweled Lotus, $80 each

Not long after the Wizards takeover of the Commander format, there was a stream with one of the designers and they said they’d be revisiting the Banned List. This triggered a frenzy of buying, and I wasn’t immune. I actually managed to resell one of the four I bought for $160, but I haven’t factored that into the costs/card. The graph tells a lovely story:

I’m still a believer in the card getting unbanned eventually, because it’s got such powerful applications in a format that wants access to those sorts of cards. If there’s ever an official split between ‘regular’ EDH and cEDH, this would be one of the main benefactors. The price is about $20 higher than my buy-in, but when it’s unbanned, this could easily hit $200. Biggest question would be if the card gets a reprint around the time of the announcement. You can make the case that Dockside has Cube and Legacy/Vintage applications (plus sweet Avatar association) but reprinting Jeweled Lotus would be a declaration that it’s coming back.

I also want to note that there’s no Commander-themed set currently on the agenda for 2026. If there was a Commander Legends 3 coming up, that would be a different case entirely.

April 15: 2x Marsh Flats, 2x Scalding Tarn, all Dragonscale Foil Borderless, $250 each

Now I do want to note that I got these as trade-ins at a local event, so I didn’t lay down a grand in cash for them. I did give up a lot to get them, and I could have put those trades towards any number of other things, and goodness do I wish I had. (I also sent in a lot of trade-ins for a set of Dragonscale lands for my Dragon deck, argh!) I justified these purchases by thinking that a) Dragons are eternally popular, b) they will complete the set, and when they do, the first batch will get pricey and c) it took 500 Collector Boosters to get one specific Dragonscale fetchland. Sadly, none of this has panned out yet. Tarns are down more than $50 from my price, and Marsh Flats can be had for nearly $100 less. This might be one of my worst specs (and MTG Fast Finance picks) ever. It also didn’t help that right after Tarkir:Dragonstorm we went into Final Fantasy hype, and that sucked up ALL the money.

April 25: Rainbow Foil Blasphemous Act (Deadpool) x22, $5.50 each

A Dump Week special, this was the perfect call at the perfect time, but there’s an anvil coming in to smash it like it’s a cartoon coyote. Blasphemous Act is a great card, gets a lot of precon printings and at the time, only the second special frame version of the card. The price stayed consistent in this range until October, when the Spider-Man SL added a newspaper version and right after that, the Avatar bonus sheet added another. Currently this can be had for about $4 shipped, but with the glut available, I’m just going to have to be very very patient. Or hope that the Deadpool version takes off with the new Marvel cards this summer.

July 23: LP Foil Turntimber Ranger x23, $1.50 each

When the promo Katara was previewed, and we saw that Allies were back on the menu, I didn’t follow the hype of the obvious stuff like Sea Gate Loremaster, I went for two vendors who had big stacks of this LP foil and figured all the rare Zendikar Allies would see a bump. I was sort of right, as LP foils are up to $4 with shipping, but I’m selling them woefully slowly and I would love to buylist these out at $3, but I’d settle for $2 and move on.

August 5: Rainbow Foil JPN Heroic Intervention (Aerith’s Curaga Magic) x14, $8 each

This is a case where it looks like I should be despondent, but really, the plan is working. This was a Dump Week call, and live on cast James and I were talking about the FIN SLs in Dump Week, Heroic came up as a $20 foil but the JPN copies were less than half that. So I bought more than a few and brought them to eBay, where non-English sells much easier than on TCGPlayer, and I’m moving copies comfortably at $16 with free shipping, making a tidy profit every couple weeks. Considering the mega-whammy that Heroic has gotten recently, with SPM and TLA bonus sheet copies arriving, and the news that there will be three more with Marvel Super Heroes this summer, getting in cheap with iconic characters/art and going to the other site to sell is working out nicely.

August 8: Double Rainbow Foil Tendershoot Dryad x8, $12 each

Another Dump Week spec, with this being a super sweet version of a card in a ton of Commander decks and only gettable if you bought the sealed SL deck for $200. I thought the timing was right, but it turned out to be early, as Black Friday this was bought up for under $10 and now it’s at $11. I don’t feel bad, this will get there, it’s too pretty and too rare not to.

September 28: Foil Corruption of Towashi x106, $0.14 each

This is a play I made to clean out one vendor of a foil uncommon that could jump to $1 or $2 with the sheer number of transforming creatures getting made, but especially the Lorwyn Eclipsed cards that are flipping back and forth. This might not work out, but I spent just under $15 total, so it’s a fun little gamble.

December 4: The Stars Gaze Back nonfoil SL x2, $40 each and Rainbow Foil Flamekin Harbinger x6, $8 each

Pretty straightforward here: This was a convention SLD, so there’s not a lot, and we’re about to get a 5-color Elemental Commander deck. I’m debating on reselling the Harbingers now, as there’s only 10 foil copies available under $20 on TCG, but with the holiday I tend to turn off my inventory while I visit family, so logistics are going to have me wait a couple weeks before I move what I’ve got.

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 an event and you see a giant flashing ‘CUBE DRAFT’ sign, go over, say hi, and be ready to draft.

Looking back at MTG x Final Fantasy for Future Value

So much is going on, from cancelled Secret Lairs to Arena Direct and an overflow of turkey, but I think the time is right to take a step back and look at Final Fantasy cards, now that we’re a safe five months from its release. This set is a landmark, a turning point in terms of finance and attention, so let’s look at some cards and see where the value can be gained by buying in now.

Two caveats need to be given about this list: First, I think I’ve picked some of these in other writing, Discord posts, or on MTG Fast Finance. I’m not holding any copies of these cards, aside from some for Commander decks, so if I’m double-pumping, it’s out of forgetfulness and not out of nefarious planning. 

Second, I’ve listed the EDHREC data for each of these cards, but the key thing to remember is that EDHREC is weighted towards the cards that are in precons, as well as the players who are super-invested in this game. There’s been no preconstructed decks using any of these cards (yet) so we don’t need to stress about that, but we should always remember it. 

Final Fantasy Main Set cards

Starting Town (73k decks, $11 nonfoil/$13 foil) – Generally speaking, I’m no longer interested in speculating on Standard cards, but the Commander appeal of a five-color land like this plus the Standard use patterns helps me feel pretty darn good about this. Lots of decks want one, and almost no Standard decks run just one. Multi-colored manabases have never had it so good, between shocks, surveil lands, Verges, and the anything-goes nature of Town, Fabled Passage, and Multiversal Passage. Town is appealing on all of these angles, and while it’s a strong contender to get some sort of special printing eventually, for right now, it’s a card I want to stock up on. 

Borderless Earth Crystal (68k, $11/$13) – All of the Crystals have decent-to-good inclusion rates, but the Earth Crystal does something that is a little too supported in Commander, and that is the +1/+1 counter theme. We’re almost overloaded with good things to do and play and this giving double counters plus the ability to add counters (all sorts of sick enabling going on here) means that the Earth Crystal will always be a good option for these decks going forward. Tidus and Yuna really want this card, but there’s no shortage of Commanders who want this ability. Plus, every time they go back to this well (Like in Avatar) it’ll just make this card better and better.

Borderless Fire Crystal (65k, $9/$12) – Tokens are another theme that Wizards keeps going back to, a popular and powerful thing to focus on. Ghired, Mirror of the Wilds is just one example but there’s others that do similar things, like The Jolly Balloon Man or Brudiclad, Telchor Engineer. Six additional mana is a steep price to pay, but on top of the cost reduction and giving everything haste, there’s a lot of people apparently willing to pay that price. Or maybe folks just want the haste and reduction for four mana, and the six-mana ability is just a rare bonus. Either way. 

Buster Sword (65k, $38/$43) – Having seen this card hit people, I’m convinced it should be a bonus sword of the cycle, only this one is the Sword of Kicking and Butt. Two mana, three power, and a card draw plus the mana to do the thing is a whole lot of value. Additionally, this is an iconic sword, something that’s been given countless skins and is just iconic, in the regular frame or the extra-pricey borderless frame. The borderless version is already pretty pricely, so I think there’s more value to be gained in the regular copies, but if you have the ability, Cloud holding his sword is always going to be a big draw.

Borderless Wind Crystal (60k, $7/$10) – just like tokens and counters, lifegain is one of those themes that always gets better and better. There’s a lot of ways to double up on the lifegain, and this is the cheapest, in addition to the cost reduction for everything else you’re doing. The borderless versions are much prettier, and this is also the cheapest to buy of the five.  

Borderless Midgar, City of Mako (59k, $3/$5) – I have to admit, all five spells/lands are in good use numbers, and no matter the format you’re playing, having lands also be spells is incredible flexibility. We all want to play less lands, so get your MDFCs and get your Adventure lands. Midgar is probably the best, because when you can’t muck about with the spell, it’s the land. But when it’s late in the game and a land is an awful draw, congrats! Now you get two cards! Also, the borderless version looks so much cooler here. 

Restoration Magic (52k, $1/$2) – Finally, a card with no borderless version to get, but a high inclusion rate and a fantastic effect. Save one thing, or save everything, and gain some life while you’re at it! 

Final Fantasy Through the Ages (FCA) Cards

Akroma’s Will (339k, $30/$120) – It’s important to remember that the FCA cards do indeed have different rarities, unlike the special sheets in Spider-Man and Avatar. The Mythics from the FCA sheet are difficult to pull, showing up only every 500 Collector Booster packs, and that’s for both the foil and nonfoil. Considering the amount of product you have to open to get one of these, $30 for the nonfoil seems woefully underpriced. The only thing holding me back is that another printing will come along and that’ll slow future growth, but it could be a long time indeed before we get that next printing. 

Azusa, Lost but Seeking (271k, $8/$30) – If you like the Miku art better, or the other Secret Lair version from Tsubonari, I respect your choice, but there’s blessed little full-art printings like this that are so ethereal and lovely. Amano is iconic for a reason, and I think this version could double within the next year. 

Carpet of Flowers (106k, $3/$17) – The rares of this sheet are about every 250 packs, and yet some of them are surprisingly cheap.

Carpet is one of the prime cards that make a blue player super sad, and this is the only special frame. Get your foils while they are affordable, and before the cEDH players snatch them all up. 

Isshin, Two Heavens as One (25k as commander, #17 over last two years, $9/$60) – Again, this is some iconic art, courtesy of Tetsuya Nomura, and one of the top commanders over the last couple years. Mardu wants to attack, and the triggers that can be copied range from extra power and toughness, to bonus tokens, to additional combats. Everything is on the table, and Lightning will chop through the damn thing as needed. The foil is at its lowest price to date, and so I think with under a hundred copies left on TCG, it’s time to grab a couple of them for long-term growth. 

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 an event and you see a giant flashing ‘CUBE DRAFT’ sign, go over, say hi, and be ready to draft.

Are We Buying The Monster Hunter x Magic: the Gathering Superdrop?

Good grief, there’s yet another superdrop? And this one is an international sensation of IP, with giant fantasy monsters and the humans who stand up to them?

Why did it take so long?

Let’s talk about the Monster Hunter superdrop, the individual cards, and what’s worth braving the queue for.

All of the drops are at the $29.99 nonfoil/$39.99 rainbow foil, and there is some bundle pricing I’ll review in a moment, but it’s worth noting that the bundle prices have zero discount this time around. It’s been a while since they did that to us, but at least we get a sweet promo.

For each card in the drops, I’m listing the EDHREC number and the price ranges for the cheapest and most expensive versions. 

Secret Lair x Monster Hunter: The Hunt

Blind Obedience ($1-$30, 215k)

Snap ($2-$115, 272k)

Village Rites (25¢-$2, 320k)

Mizzium Mortars (50¢-$3, 48k)

Tooth and Nail ($1-$40, 46k)

There’s useful cards and not-useful cards, and we’ve had premium versions of most of these already. Solid choices, but nothing screaming at me in terms of the card choice. The art is another matter, as I’ll get to in a moment. 

Secret Lair x Monster Hunter: The Hunters

Grand Abolisher ($9-$30, 314k decks)

Archeomancer (50¢-$30, 119k)

Grim Haruspex ($1-$14, 114k)

Imperial Recruiter ($11-$120, 176k)

Champion of Lambholt ($2-$12, 200k)

Very good selection, and the first premium printing for several of these cards. Recruiter’s borderless foil from MH2 is a $20 card, in case you’re thinking that you’re about to get a three-figure version. Hate to disappoint, but that’s the Portal: Three Kingdoms version, and you’re out of luck. This is an excellent drop, between the cards, inclusion rate, and sweet versions already available. 

Secret Lair x Monster Hunter: The Monsters

Nezahal, Primal Tide ($7-$30, 116k decks)

Drakuseth, Maw of Flames (50¢-$20, 110k)

Ziatora, the Incinerator (50¢-$30, 45k)

Vaevictus Asmati, the Dire ($1-$15, 13k)

Sarulf, Realm Eater (25¢-$1, 6k)

The Dinosaur already has a Secret Lair version, but it’s the ‘relief coin’ version. This set of monsters is mostly under-used and lacking in special versions, so this has potential to go very well. Drakuseth in particular looks like a banger of a card, but with all the Dragon options, we tend to look for value in enters triggers, not attack triggers, and we often take Drakuseth out of decks. 

Secret Lair x Monster Hunter: The Monsters II

Razaketh, the Foulblooded ($8-$54, 70k decks)

Kalamax, the Stormsire (50¢-$5, 5k)

Wasitora, Nekoru Queen (50¢-$4, 9k)

Amareth, the Lustrous (50¢-$3, 7k)

I’m pretty low on this set of cards. Three of these are already cheap and used very little, and while this is a really cool version of Razaketh, the value isn’t really there for me. I don’t want to get this drop, except for the ways I’m about to describe.

This drop has some additional wrinkles worth addressing. First of all, there are English and Japanese versions of each card and bundle. English is likely to be the more expensive version, and given how TCG handles the languages in their searches, Japanese copies will take longer to reach the value you want them to get to.

Also, bundles come with an awesome Sol Ring promo, always a rainbow foil, and in the language of the bundle you order. If you order the biggest bundle, you’ll get two of the Sol Rings.

Finally, there’s a Surge Foil version of each of the cards, but you can’t order those Lairs individually. Instead, you have to buy the bundle at $240 for English or Japanese. That’s $60 per lair, which is in line with a bonus foiling version. I expect the Sol Ring to be a popular card, much like the Final Fantasy Gilded Lotus was. 

While the cards aren’t big choices in terms of how many decks they are in, this set of art might be some of the best ever in terms of the characters depicted. It’s big fantasy monster art, in a borderless frame, and reflecting an incredibly popular game series. I’ve never played the series, and that’s okay. 

Monster Hunter has a great comparison with another profitable IP that you might or might not have known about: Hatsune Miku. The cards could be notably mid, and because of the art and IP, the demand should be good. We’re here to make money off of the game, not fixate on the things we know about. We know that there’s an enormous amount of players who have bought the game, or more than one game, and combined with some kickass art, I feel like this entire drop should do well. 

However, I also have to acknowledge that this is the fifth big drop in a seven-week period, and that’s on top of Avatar being released as a main set. From my article two weeks ago: “Secret Scare was on 10/13, Playstation was on 10/27, then the Encyclopedia boxes dropped on 11/3, and now Avatar has five drops coming on 11/17.” Add in Monster Hunter on 12/1 and we’ve got quite the raid on our wallets happening. 

We also have a very recent example of what happens when you give us special foils in a Drop: The Furby Confetti foils sold out after some of the other drops on 10/13, but they sold out way before the regular foils. 

My plan is to do what I can to get the surge foil drops. I’m going to skip the regular foil and nonfoil drops, but if I can get in the random queue and snag a couple of those bundles, that should resell nicely and quickly. Everything else can wait for Dump Week.

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 an event and you see a giant flashing ‘CUBE DRAFT’ sign, go over, say hi, and be ready to draft.