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Are We Buying the Avatar: the Last Airbender X MTG Superdrop?

It’s a time of madness, people, as Wizards assaults our wallets for the fourth big drop in a five-week span. 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. Between the problems people encounter on the website, and the powerful drain all this has on our wallets, you can be forgiven for thinking, “I don’t know if I want to buy this right now.”

I’m here to help, with a breakdown of the cards, their usage rates, and what’s worth it at MSRP and what’s worth waiting for Dump Week.

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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.

Where to Spend and Save Your Magic Dollars

We are in an unprecedented era when it comes to spending money on Magic, and next year will be even wilder. 

Seven sets planned for 2026, and that’s without the inevitable Secret Lair/Chaos Vault offerings that Wizards gives us. Right now, we’re in the middle of three superdrops within a month of each other: Secret Scare, Playstation, and Avatar: the Last Airbender. Things are wild and they are only going to get worse. 

I write about Magic finance, but really, my budget isn’t unlimited. I have to decide what to buy and what not to buy. I’m here to give you my general guide, and give some examples/counterexamples of why I’m following these guidelines. Please note that this is not a comprehensive list of everything that’s done well, but instead is a set of rules that I follow when spending money on Magic cards that I plan to resell.

I also need to note that this doesn’t cover things I buy for myself, personally, or for my decks. I have a very pretty, maximum-foil Dragon deck, and I’ve paid early prices because I had to have that foil right now and I don’t feel bad. 

We can’t buy everything and frankly, we shouldn’t. Let’s go over what I am buying, and what I’m staying away from.

Things I do buy:

  1. Reprints that make staples cheap 

Dump Week is a wonderful thing that’s happening in Magic finance right now. Basically, there’s a group of people who need to get as much as they can after paying retail for something, even if they end up with a small sliver of profit or even a loss. A great example of this is coming up with Demonic Tutor. Once the Secret Lair version is on TCGPlayer, there will be a short time where you can buy foils and nonfoils of the Kieran Yanner art for much less than they will eventually cost.

The risk here is repeated reprints. I picked up a lot of Aerith’s version of Heroic Intervention, just to see it show up again in Spider-Man AND Avatar. I bought Deadpool’s Blasphemous Act, only to see a new Secret Lair version shortly after. I’m not going to lose money on these long-term, but it’ll take a lot longer thanks to the reprints. Nothing I can do about this, either.

  1. Cards that are good with upcoming Commanders/themes

I made a lot of money on some assorted Assassin specs when ACR was previewed, and I’ve already made good money on some Avatar-related ones like Earth Surge. More Allies are coming, and Earthbending especially offers a whole lot of chances for cards to spike. I’m also in on Corruption of Towashi, as a transform-related card for what’s coming up in Lorwyn Eclipsed.

The key with these specs is to make sure you sell into the hype, because if you wait, interest and prices cool off. A great example of this from my own experience is Widespread Brutality. I bought pack foils for $1, resold them at $5, but later found an extra dozen copies that didn’t stay with the group and are now back to under a buck.

  1. Secret Lairs with proven staples

There’s a lot of money to be made if you can get specific Lairs at retail during the buying frenzy. I hate the queue, and that little walking jerk, but I can’t deny the money I make. I detail this in each of the ‘Are We Buying…’ articles I write before each Lair drops, and here’s the biggest thing to know: You need to sell ASAP.

The easiest way is eBay, but TCG will let some stores presell and there’s a few other presale sites too. The Lairs that sell out have a ton of FOMO and people are willing to pay a lot. Preselling can lock in some profits and give you a turnaround time of nearly zero, which is the best sort of profit by far. 

  1. Cards underpriced due to circumstances

Sometimes, cards are cheap due to weird conditions or a lack of awareness. Jumpstart cards can be like this, but Commander bannings have me really really tempted. I’ve picked up a playset of foil borderless Jeweled Lotus not too long ago and I’m just waiting for them to be unbanned. I’m ready for when it does. I recognize how speculative this is, but I feel confident it’ll eventually get unbanned. 

What I don’t buy:

These are the categories of cards that I’m no longer buying. I’m not saying they can’t turn a profit, only that they are too likely to lose me money and I’d rather just stay away entirely.

  1. Constructed cards. 

Not Standard, Modern, Legacy, nothing. Constructed isn’t moving the needle for the majority of cards, and those few where it does I’m at the mercy of the metagame (looking at you, Quantum Riddler) and hoping I’ll get there. Commander is just more certain, more predictable, and I much prefer to put money there than in the four-of formats. Note that I’m not saying I never spec on cards that are good in Constructed, I’m saying I never buy only because of that. The Spider-Man Ephemerate is a great example. Big in Commander, only special version, and it’s a bonus that it’s good in Modern.  

  1. Anything that’s had a Commander deck reprint (It’ll get printed again)

This doesn’t include the new-to-Magic cards, as those can be worth a spec, but generally speaking, if a card’s been in a regular Commander deck, it’ll be there again. It’ll also have a chance to be part of a Surge foil or something like that, which will make other versions tank even farther. I’ve had some bad experiences here, and heaven willing, I’ll be able to avoid that issue again. 

  1. Cards with huge amounts of stock already online

James and I often look up the quantity in stock for a card when we evaluate each others’ picks on MTG Fast Finance, and knowing the amount still available is a very useful data point. If there’s a large amount online, I often want to wait and let many of those copies get soaked up by early action before moving in on a card. I don’t want to be the only one with 400 of a card. I’d rather wait till 250-300 of those copies are gone, to show that there is a demand, and then I’ll be happy to buy in, even if the price has gone up. 

A card spiking brings people out of the woodwork to sell it, so bake that into your expectations. Copies will materialize when it gets pricey, and keeping your profits can be tricky. 

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.

Planning for all the Magic in 2026

There’s a lot about to happen in Magic, with Avatar and a couple of big Secret Lairs along the way, but there’s also a whole lot on the agenda for 2026 in Magic: the Gathering. There will be seven releases next calendar year, and while they are of varying sizes, we can make some preliminary guesses about what’ll be in those sets and hopefully, figure out some cards to buy ahead of time. 

I don’t have any secret bonus information, just lots of experience with Magic as a game and with the players. No shadowy cabal action here, just pure speculation. 

Here’s the calendar, released before they announced that Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles was the big deal for March. 

So let’s talk about these in order, with what we know, what we think, and what we should consider buying.

To be clear, we don’t know for sure that there’s bonus sheets or Commander decks, and those are ripe sources of reprints. It could absolutely be that many of these picks 

Lorwyn Eclipsed

We’ve gotten a few cards from this set, and there’s a few trends we can get from these previews. Transforming back and forth is on at least three mythics, we are getting evoke and hybrid elementals. We know there’s Kithkin, Elves, Merfolk. We also know the themes for the two Commander decks: five-color Elementals and Jund -1/-1 counters. 

There’s been a lot of good stuff in the minus counters decks over the years, and you can look at the list for any Hapatra, Vizier of Poisons deck and find some great cards. Two of the biggies are Flourishing Defenses and Blowfly Infestation, those feel like a lock to be reprinted. Crumbling Ashes is a pet card of mine for this theme, but the big card I’ll be watching for here is Contagion Engine. If that’s not in the Commander deck, then the very-hard-to-pull raised foils from OTP could easily jump from the $20-$25 range to $50+.

Five-color Elementals has been good enough to be a Modern deck at times, and I have a hard time picking what could go in the deck or left out. Earlier this year on MTG Fast Finance I picked Horde of Notions in pack foil, bassed on comments they made in Tarkir:Dragonstorm. In that set, there was a Temur Dragons Commander deck that left out Mirrym, because they didn’t want the older card to outshine the new Commanders. I think that philosophy will hold, and we will see two or three new five-color Elementals. This makes Omnath, Locus of All a card I should want to pick up now as well, hoping that they leave it out, but unfortunately, there’s a super sweet buy-a-box version of the card with an enormous amount available online, so no, don’t buy that. 

There’s a lot of accessories for Elementals, and lesser-known ones. This is just a short list, and if it’s in the deck might not be a good pick, but that’s the bet you’re making if you buy early: Titania, Nature’s Force, Kaheera, the Orphanguard, Master of Waves, Chandra’s Embercat, Wilderness Elemental, Eyes of the Wisent, and Wand of the Elements. Some of those will get reprinted, some won’t. 

One of the cards I mentioned in the ProTrader Discord, having bought a brick, remains an excellent candidate for Commander deck/bonus sheet, but it was cheap to buy a brick: Corruption of Towashi. It’s five mana, yes, but being able to draw cards when you’re transforming things, even just once a turn, would be the sort of thing people really want to add to decks. There’s no special version, so I got a bunch of pack foils and I feel good about it. 

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

We’ve gotten some previews here too, and we’re getting some +1/+1 counter synergies as well as a lot of support for creatures who are Mutants, Ninjas, and Turtles. There’s already been a few spikes here, and we know the bonus sheet has Doubling Season to start with. 

Over the next few months, I fully expect to see all sorts of random Mutant/Ninja/Turtles get spikes, even though we don’t know the formulation for the set yet, how many Commander decks, etc. Some of my favorites here, again with the risk of reprints, would be Ambling Stormshell in Showcase foil, Spider-Ham, Peter Porker, and Jenova, Ancient Calamity. 

Secrets of Strixhaven

No cards yet, but would expect Learn/Lesson to be big here. My guess is that we’ll get most of the biggies reprinted in some way, but until we know for sure, I’m hesitant to buy in. 

Marvel Super Heroes

Next of the six Stones, interested in creature type hero? James has already mentioned on the cast that you want your Soul Stones now, and he’s exactly right. We’re going to see a lot of folks who want to assemble the stones, and that means you want to have the first one in stock. Diamond Hands, people!

Also if Heroes are a big thing, we might see a big spike in Cid, Timeless Artificer, a card that would be difficult for them to reprint inside a Marvel IP. We’ll have to see. 

The Hobbit

Everything from LOTR should be a risk to be reprinted, either in set, reskinned, bonus sheet. A real Smaug card! More Dwarves! My big plan here is to buy all the copies of The One Ring that I can when it gets cheap again. 

Reality Fracture

We know Bolas was set loose again, back in Tarkir: Dragonstorm. Stuff is complicated, stories loop back on themselves. Don’t have any idea if this is a Bolas set or what. 

Star Trek

Edge of Eternities gave us the model for Stations, Warp, and Spacecraft, and we’ll get all sorts of iconic stuff here. We’re very early but the single best card I’d want to have in such a deck is Inspirit, Flagship Vessel, for its ability to slowly charge up other Spacecraft. Could be reskinned into the Enterprise, so wait and see is the order of the day. 

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.

Modern Potential At The Pro Tour

Today, the Pro Tour starts, Edge of Eternities Draft and then Modern Constructed. I love Modern as a format, because it showcases old cards, fun interactions, and people who have favorite decks trying to go the distance. 

The Modern metagame is pretty healthy, considering that there’s no single best deck at the moment (subject to change if a deck rocks the PT) so people all have their preferred plans. It’s a race, maybe there’s interaction and maybe there isn’t, but people have what they like to do and they are good at it. 

So let’s go over the main decks and a little bit of the outliers, with an eye on what’s the best buy if one of the decks looks unstoppable. I’m going over the known decks, if something shows up out of nowhere then I advise you to hang on tight. 

For each of the decks, I’ve identified cards I think are good buys. The already-expensive cards might go to crazy expensive, but mostly I’m looking for things that are a little cheap and a lot of potential.

It’s also worth mentioning that as tournament cards, we have two big differences from most Commander-based specs. First, people buy these in fours, because you need a playset and preferably a matching set at that. Second, tournament players don’t always want the most fancy version. There’s a big chunk of tournament players who like nonfoils, to avoid warping and being called out for marked cards.

Esper Goryo’s 

Atraxa, Grand Unifier – Griselbrand might be the more powerful thing to reanimate, but Atraxa is a lifepoint swing AND a reload of cards in hand. There’s also a very spicy target in the FCA nonfoils and the step-and compleat foils. Both are good and this is one of the many cards that people would want by the playset.

Goryo’s Vengeance – As the namesake card, this does it all, and even comes in a sweet movie poster frame if you’re really feeling frisky. There’s other versions, but this one is both unique and very reasonably priced. 

Psychic Frog – The borderless is pretty pricey, so I’d be looking at the regular nonfoils. This has enough use in Legacy and Exile decks that I feel okay about picking up a couple of playsets. 

Tameshi Belcher 

Lotus Bloom – The only major reprint of this is the Time Spiral remastered one. There’s a retro foil version that’s the only special version, and that’s the one most likely to bump if the deck performs. 

Tameshi, Reality Architect – There’s a neon borderless version that I’d be after, because this is a great combo card in Commander as well. 

MDFC lands – Several of these lands are over $5, and if this deck takes off, then basically all of these lands are on the agenda. They were ‘only’ uncommons but it’s been more than a year and we can already see what Sink into Stupor’s price has done. I wish I could pinpoint better than this, but the 3 life lands seem to be a bit more prevalent here, both rares and nonrares.

Boros Energy

Guide of Souls – This had fallen down some since the recent bans but it’s back up in price. The card is still very very good and should the deck perform, this will go higher, though it’s a rare and not mythic. 

Phelia, Exuberant Shepherd – Phelia is amazing in just about any deck that can flicker its own things for value, but don’t overlook how good it is to just banish a blocker. The synergies are very strong in this deck and Orzhov Blink, so this might see copies go off this weekend. 

Voice of Victory – The regular nonfoils have doubled up since June, and this card has a long time to be good in both Modern and Standard. I can easily visualize matches on camera where interaction is just sitting in hand because of this.

Eldrazi Tron

Ugin, Eye of the Storms – Used to be that you got your seven mana, and then you had to activate Karn to get rid of something. Now you get to 7, you get an exile on cast, and if it resolves, you either get a card back or you add more colorless and cast a second thing, wiping out a second permanent. If Ugin has a good weekend, the sky is the limit.

Kozilek’s Command – I know this has been called out in articles and MTG Fast Finance, but it just gets better and better. No other deck wants this, yet it remains a powerful and flexible card in these decks. 

Sire of Seven Deaths – Foundations gave us a lot of ridiculous cards, but this one will cost your opponent seven life almost no matter what, and some good camera time could end up goosing this price pretty high.

Esper Blink

Ephemerate – I like the new Spider-Man secret lair version of this most, but when you’re maxing value on the first cast and the rebound, people pay attention. 

Emperor of Bones – Resetting the counters on this allows you to bring back cards, and this deck excels at maximizing the triggers involved. Look for some sick sequences on camera. 

Witch Enchanter – Quietly one of the most expensive MDFCs, if it keeps doing well, this could be a huge gainer. 

Other Decks

Pinnacle Emissary – Assorted Affinity decks are going off with this, using the warp cost of a single mana plus cheap artifacts to build some ridiculous turns. A good showing could have this taking off. 

Shifting Woodland – A backup piece in multiple combo decks, plus an incredible utility land in Commander, this has all the signs of breaking out. 

Phlage, Titan of Fire’s Fury – Another Boros card that survived the bans, look for this to do a lot of work this weekend, with likely price gains to match. 

Doorkeeper Thrull – A surprising number of decks have trouble with this card, and sometimes all you need is a turn or two. 

Blade of the Bloodchief – The Broodscale combo can end a game out of nowhere, and since this has had no reprints of note, there’s a lot of room for grown if the combo performs this weekend.

Allosaurus Rider – Neoform decks are trying to cheat this in and then sacrifice it for value, and as one of the core unfair cards, it might have a very profitable weekend. 

Consign to Memory – One of the top sideboard cards across the format, this has been climbing higher and higher since its release. Clearly it needs a reprint, but it hasn’t happened yet.

Wrath of the Skies – a pet card of mine, if you can turn one Tune the Narrative and turn two Wrath of the Skies, you can clean up lots and lots of problems. Matchup-dependent, yes, but very powerful.

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.