Old Dogs, New Tricks

Whaddup, nerds?

It’s time for another installment of “Jason talks about cards that will slowly but inevitably double or triple in value over the next 6 months to a year but not many people are going to notice because everyone is trying to make $0.50 a copy on non-mythic rares in a post-mythic era from a set with Masterpieces in it because Pro Tour hype is the best hype there is” which is the new subtitle of this series. The nautical theme felt forced, after all. If you’re still reading, it’s because you like MTG Finance on easy mode, same as me. Do you want to make a bunch of money? Go buy every copy of Black Market you can find and sit on them. It’s not every day we find a card that is so obviously and inevitably going to go up, after all. I shouldn’t have to make good calls like that all the time – Black Market has enough potential that I should be able to retire from MTG Finance.

I can’t, though. I am going to keep writing every week and coming up with other picks for you. They might not be as good or as obvious but  I always use the smart part of my brain to keep track of what’s going on and tell you what to do about it. Unfortunately there isn’t a ton to be excited about from Kaladesh at this point in terms of commanders that are going to shove other prices up so I was at a bit of a loss this week. That was, until I realized Kaladesh cards are going to be used to update other decks and if those decks gain in popularity as a result of new printings that change their relative popularity, the cards in the decks have more upside than they used to. All of the cards in the decks. It was an interesting thought and it didn’t take me very long to find an excellent example of just what I’m talking about.

Everything’s Relative

When I say “relative popularity” I mean its popularity relative to the other decks in the format and the format itself. It’s hard to track something as nebulous as “true” popularity because you wouldn’t know if the increase in the number of decks being built indicates a change in preference or a change in the overall popularity of the format. That’s why I like how EDHREC is set up because you can nearly eyeball decks that are gaining in relative popularity without having to do any math, and by “math” I mean “looking at 2 numbers and seeing which number is larger” a lot of the time. At worst you need to calculate a ratio.

It didn’t take long to see that Mizzix of the Izmagnus was making moves. Mizzix is the 19th most popular commander on EDHREC of all time with a whopping 616 decks dedicated to the weird Goblin Wizard thing. 19th overall isn’t bad but when I noticed it was the 4th most popular over the last month and the 6th most popular this week, I figured something was up. It leapt past Leovold earlier in the month and the only reason it’s not in 3rd this week is for the same reason Mizzix itself is moving up in relative popularity in my view – new cards. Ezuri is being built and redrafted because of Rashmi and Panharmonicon. Brago is being built and redrafted because of Cloudblazer and Panharmonicon again. Queen Marchesa got Kambal, Chandra, Authority of the Consuls and some land. Nearly exactly as many Mizzix decks were added this week as Queen Marchesa, Ezuri and Brago; essentially the relative popularity of all of those decks are the same but Ezuri and Brago are more popular relative to the total number of decks on EDHREC so the change is most profound in Mizzix’s case. Quibbling beyond that makes little sense because I could easily plumb through Brago and Ezuri lists for picks and I might do that next week if I’m not distracted by something else that seems more important.

New Pizzix in the Mizzix

Why the spotlight on Mizzix all of a sudden? What did it even get that makes people care?

First and foremost, I think although Aetherflux Reservoir is a pretty obvious Ayli/Oloro/Karlov card, it has applications here. Gaining life when you do what you were going to do already (play spells) and either buying yourself a cushion to help you not die or giving yourself the ability to point and click delete someone at the table is appealing. This card is going to be expensive in a year or two but for now, it’s not going to push up individual cards so much as decks. You’ll want to either gain a ton of life the hard way or play a ton of spells and gain life the… other hard way. Look, being able to treat an opponent like Alderaan shouldn’t be easy.

The other card that is more unique to Mizzix in my view is Metallurgic Summonings, a card I’m not super sold on. Luckily my skepticism steered people away from preordering, which would have been a mistake. Now if the card is actually good in EDH I get to jump on the bandwagon and act like when I write about it, I’m discovering the card. It’s a win-win for me, which is rare because normally the position of having to evaluate cards in formats you don’t play sucks. If Summonings ends up a good cards, Mizzix will be one of the few decks that can really take advantage of it. You have mana rocks and such so even if they start picking off the little durdle monsters you summonings, you should still be able to hopefully qualify for the “ultimate” on Summonings and serve a bunch more spells to their domes.

Insidious Will is not a card that was an impetus for Mizzix seeing more play, nor was Spirebluff Canal nor was Saheeli’s Artistry, but I think all of these cards make the cut in a decent percentage of Mizzix decks, but it’s hard to say how greedily people want to jam new cards considering they’d have to cut something out of a deck that was already running well if they want to make room for new stuff. That’s easier for a Fast Land than it is another Cryptic Command, although Insidious Will is too many cards in one not to consider. It does everything this deck wants.

What’s got upside moving forward if we get a sustained increase in the popularity of Mizzix that isn’t completely nipped in the bud by Commander 2016?

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Mizzix’s Mastery’s graph is a bit all over the place, but with the price seeming the plateau and there being little chance of decreases in the price of cards like Mystic Confluence, it seems like we’re entering a period where the total price of cards in the precon will no longer be bound by MSRP. This means Mizzix’s Mastery can go up in price without anything else going down. The weird balancing act of MSRP enforcing the total price will be out the window, so watch Mastery. It hasn’t impacted Legacy (and who’s even playing Legacy anymore?) the way we might have hoped, but it’s impacting Mizzix decks in EDH and every copy that ends up in a Melek or Jeleva deck means there is one person who has a copy of Mizzix that needs a copy of Mizzix’s Mastery that didn’t come from the same precon as the Mizzix. If you need 1.01 copies of Mizzix’s Mastery for every Mizzix deck built, you’re going to see the price move. I like it at its current price (near historic low) a lot.

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Even though this card is at its historic high point, it’s by no means done going up. EDH is pushing the whole cycle (except Increasing Devotion, which was pantsed by a reprinting) up and now is basically your last chance. These cards are decently reprintable, but with them all but ruled out for Commander 2016 and not super likely in Commander 2017, you have a few key venues for reprinting them ruled out (not ruled out per se, but I’m confident enough that they’ll dodge reprintings in both C16 and C17 to the extent that I’d bet my own money).

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It’s hard to find a card that seems more directly tied to the fate of Mizzix. As Mizzix gains in popularity, demand for this card will grow at an equalish (not 100% of Mizzix decks run this, though they all should) rate. Expensive and powerful, this is the perfect example (another would be Expropriate) of a card that rewards you for doing what Mizzix does. Once this costs like 4 or 5 mana because you have so many experience counters that every spell is trivial to play, you’ll see how trivial winning the game is, also. You should be able to find a way to win the game if you resolve this and if you don’t, a Feldon’s Cane or a Mizzix’s Mastery or something should be able to finish them off. Drawing your entire deck, discard all but 7 cards then aiming a big Mastery at the table is a very satisfying way to win, and casting Enter the Infinite for cheap seems ideal. This spell was made for Mizzix and as Mizzix gets more popular, expect this to grow – not that it wouldn’t have anyway.

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This is never getting cheaper. With multiple decks that want this effect, though perhaps none more than Mizzix, and Origins fading fast from memory, this little enchantment that could, and still can, is a pretty safe pick-up. Its effect is very simple but the scry on top of the spell cost reduction means it’s never irrelevant, even when you have more experience counters than you know what to do with and your opponents can’t seem to even temporarily get Mizzix off of the board. I like this moving forward.

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This I’m interested to watch. I don’t know whether Mizzix is going to push it up all that much or not, but what I do know is that I should keep an eye on this card and this reminded me of that. It’s not so much what this card does or doesn’t do, although that factors. What is most interesting is that this will be a good test case for how recently a spiked card can grow based on some sort of demand (if there is any mind you – this is all contingent on a “maybe”) because copies never got a chance to fade into the woodwork. Are we at an artificial low because price memory is propping the price irrespective of demand? Will that matter if new demand kicks in and the card begins to climb? Are there too many copies because there are a lot of copies of any recent card? I want to see what happens to this card, an EDH staple to be sure, because it can inform what will happen to other cards that are picked up by casual formats as soon as they are out of Standard (this might help us figure out what is going to happen to Treasure Cruise and Dig Through Time, also, though I think I already know ).  How the price of Goggles diverges from a card like The Chain Veil will be incredibly instructive. Then again, The Chain Veil could leave the goggles in its wake, and that wouldn’t surprise me, either.

That does it for me this week. I hope you’re not let down – I kind of expected a few juicier cards in the Mizzix deck, but there is a real problem with something I’m calling “The precon effect” that I’ll delve into a bit deeper. Possibly not on this website – it’s possible I’ll be writing more EDH content in addition to my current MTG Price and Gathering Magic articles very soon, and I’ll announce that here when I know more. Thanks for sticking with this series, everyone. Until next week!

MTG Fast Finance Podcast: Episode 36

MTG Fast Finance is our weekly podcast covering the flurry of weekly financial activity in the world of Magic: The Gathering. MFF provides a fast, fun and useful sixty minute format. Follow along with our seasoned hosts as they walk you through this week’s big price movements, their picks of the week, metagame analysis and a rotating weekly topic.

Show Notes: Oct 6th, 2016

Segment 1: Top Movers of the Week

Note: Price movements reflect posted NM prices, and may not represent prices players have paid.

Aether Hub (Kaladesh)
Start: $1.50
Finish: $3.00
Gain: +$1.50 (+100%)

Smuggler’s Copter (Kaladesh)
Start: $9.00
Finish: $17.00
Gain: +$8.00 (+89%)

Platinum Emperion (Scars of Mirrodin)
Start: $15.00
Finish: $24.00
Gain: +$9.00 (+60%)

Scapheap Scrounger (Kaladesh)
Start: $1.75
Finish: $2.50
Gain: +$0.75 (+43%)

Cultural Exchange (Foil, Odyssey)
Start: $10.00
Finish: $14.00
Gain: +$1.75 (+40%)

Grim Flayer (Foil, EMN)
Start: $32.00
Finish: $43.00
Gain: +$11.00 (+35%)

Segment 2: Cards to Watch

James Picks:

    1. Spirebluff Canal (Foil, Kaladesh), Confidence Level 7: $10 (target entry) to $20 (+100%, 12+ months)
    2. Concealed Courtard (Foil, Kaladesh), Confidence Level 7: $10 (target entry) to $20 (+100%, 12+ months)
    3. Madcap Experiment (Foil, Kaladesh), Confidence Level 7: $3.50 to $10 (+250%, 12+ months)

Travis Picks:

  1. Obstinant Baloth, (Eldritch Moon), Confidence Level 6: $5 to $10 (+100%, 0-6+ months)
  2. Reality Smasher, (Foil, OGW), Confidence Level 6: $10 to $25 (+150%, 12+ months)

Disclosure: Travis and James may own speculative copies of the above cards.

Segment 3: Metagame Week in Review

This week the guys covered off the results from the first big Standard tournament of the season, in the SCG Open at Indianapolis.

There were 32 Smuggler’s Copter in the Top 8 decks, with aggression being the name of the game week 1 as per usual.

Segment 4: Topic of the Week

We checked back in on the prices of the Masterpiece: Inventions series of cards in Kaladesh, noting that they are falling hard as expected, and that good deals should abound by mid-November as per the Zendikar expeditions.

Go! Get (out of) The Copter!

I don’t care if you’re tired of Smuggler’s Copter jokes. It needs to be done and I have to give a terrible apology if you hear the title in an Ahnuld accent.

So we missed the boat on the Copter. It’s $18 for an in-print Standard rare at week one, and while I know that the price is going to go down, how far can it go?

The answer is, pretty far. I want to examine some rares, not mythics, to see how far we can expect the Copter to fall.

Let’s start with Shadows over Innistrad, and look for commonly played rares. We aren’t going to look at Eldritch Moon, since that’s a small set and I want to compare apples to apples.

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One of the first rares to burst onto the scene, and one whose preorder price kept climbing upward, was Thing in the Ice. Since this has come out, it’s seen some play but not a lot, rarely being the centerpiece of a deck.

Yes, it was above $15 at one point at the beginning! The lack of play lowered the price, and then there was a time not too long ago where Blue-Red Thermo-Thing was popular, and that is why the buylist price bumped up a little.

But yikes. Fifteen bucks down to five, that’s a big loss…though the card isn’t terribly popular.

Let’s look at something that often got played alongside Copter: Declaration in Stone.

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Two mana, exile a creature, and there are drawbacks in the form of Clues. Cheap, efficient, and powerful, and played a lot, though not as much as the Copter.

Even so, it’s gone from a high of $17 down to its current plateau of $4. It’s got Kaladesh and three more sets before it’s out of Standard, so there’s room for it to fall more or perhaps to creep upward. As a rare, there are a whole ton of these out there and that’s why the price has fallen has far as this. Removal this good should hold a price, and it’s actually not the usual thing for a rare to hold a price above that of a booster pack.

Shadows over Innistrad has three: Thing in the Ice, Declaration in Stone, and Tireless Tracker.

Maybe what we should also do is look at Battle for Zendikar, because that has Expeditions to goose people to buy more packs. The data doesn’t lie, either: it’s very difficult for rares to keep value. From Battle for Zendikar, the only rares over $3 are lands: Cinder Glade, Prairie Stream, and Shambling Vent.

My point is that the price on the Copter, and a lot of other rares, are about to start dropping as Kaladesh gets opened in earnest. There’s a big Limited Grand Prix this weekend, and that’s going to be a huge injection of supply into the market.

If you’re hellbent on playing Standard this weekend or next, you can go ahead and buy your playset for $70 or so, and play it for quite a while. It’s possible–possible!–that the Pro Tour next weekend spikes it even farther, but I can’t even remember the last $20 rare we had in Standard.

It’s going to be fascinating to watch.

Think of it like Aether Hub. Sure, it’s a four-of all over the place, and it’s a good card, but people, it is an uncommon. An in-print uncommon has an eBay price of $9-$10 a playset!

This first weekend of prices is crazy. The play is heavily to sell. SELL. You can buylist the Copter, a rare, for $9. You can get $10 for Gideon, Ally of Zendikar, and that’s a four-of mythic.

I’m trying very hard to bring up all the evidence that I can to convince you that if you’re buying a Copter right now, it’s to play it for the next 18 months. Please don’t buy it now, hoping it goes up more. Don’t chase the tail end of this. Wait. Be patient. The prices will drop, and you’ll lose money if you buy now and hope to sell the Saturday of the PT.

PROTRADER: PucaPicks for 10/6/16

Kaladesh is being opened all over, and I hope you have a good time opening Inventions and either playing the pretty cards or sending them out! I popped a Crucible of Worlds on Saturday and I couldn’t send that out fast enough.

Since I don’t play constructed, I want to focus this week on a set of cards that have gotten some interest but not too much: the Commander series.

If you were playing in 2011 when the first set came out, you were amazed at how much value these cards retained, but there’s factors that have come into play since. The first set happened right as Commander was tipping over, and it was under-printed in relation to eventual demand. The sets since have not had that problem, and that’s why there’s very few singles worth a lot in these boxed sets.

What these sets do offer is a truckload of $1-$4 cards and some unique, custom cards that are tricky, yet eligible, to reprint. Today I want to look at some of the cards that have been in these decks and are mostly good bets to raise in value over time, with the caveat that reprinting is quite possible and will torpedo the value if it happens.

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