The Fault in Our Cards, Part 2: Paper Frowns

Hello and welcome to another very special edition of Accumulated Knowledge. I was originally going to postpone this article another week, but the subject matter correlates pretty well to the recent outrage over the Community Cup (and I came up with a good title). If you haven’t read the first article in this series (although it didn’t start that way), you may want to go back and check it out. Also, if you aren’t familiar with the Zendikar Boom, or want a more detailed explanation of it, you can check out my first piece for MTGPrice. Both of the articles are free to read (and pretty good, in my opinion).

Skill Versus Card Availability

One of Mark Rosewater’s big recurring points about Magic is that it is not one game, but several, and they all happen to have the same rules. What he means when he says that is broader than just formats, it also has to do with skill—two novice players facing off are playing one kind of Magic, just as the finals of a Pro Tour can be a very different type of game entirely.

New players are often only thinking about their next turn, or at most what they themselves can do in the next few turns (likely that plan involves some giant green creature). At higher levels of play, the game becomes more focused on questions like: “What can my opponent do?” or “What is the critical turn in this matchup?” or “What spells or effects do I need to watch for and play around?” The same thing is true of sports: watch a football game in October on a Friday night, a Saturday night, and a Sunday night, and then tell me that you watched the same game being played—you see the same basic game rules, but totally different approaches and understanding.

Skill is the combination of talent and hard work, and in Magic, like everything else, skill is crucial to success. Players at higher skill levels are playing essentially different games, and the more skilled player is overwhelmingly favored to beat a less skilled opponent1.

Unfortunately, Magic is not a game that you can play on skill alone. Card availability can, to varying degrees, hinder your ability to play and win at your preferred level of the game. The most innately talented Magic player on Earth will never make the Pro Tour if she shows up to every qualifying event with a “Learn to Play” preconstructed product, although there exists a (only slightly more probable) chance that a bad player with a very good deck can luck his way to a victory.

The Fetch Land Controversy

It is very possible to feel that you are being denied an opportunity to truly test and prove your skill if you do not have access to the full scope of Magic‘s arsenal. This, I believe, is the first reason why so many people were outraged over Mark Rosewater’s recent announcement that Battle for Zendikar would not feature the enemy-colored fetchlands: by not providing wider access to them, Wizards of the Coast is throttling the ability of many (mostly newer) players to compete at full efficiency.


BRIEF ASPIRATIONAL ASIDE: I want to quickly talk about the impact that the Pro Tour has on this way of thinking. The Pro Tour serves a few different purposes for Wizards of the Coast, but the primary one is advertising2 new product (hence the push to make all events Standard-only last year). One of the other main reasons, though, is to give players something to aspire to—a way to set your sights on something larger, something that would validate your desire to play Magic (and get you to attend tournaments). When the Pro Tour started, this made a lot of sense: Magic was popular, but no where near the level it is today. The Pro Tour was a means of growing Magic, as well as standardizing and legitimizing tournaments at large (much of early “Organized Play” was not very organized).

It is possible that Magic would have survived this long without the Pro Tour, but I sincerely believe that it would not be thriving. Aspiring to make the Pro Tour is a great goal, but it is a very difficult one. Currently, your best bet is to either spike a Grand Prix (which is difficult to do at any skill level), or straight up win one tournament and then make top four or top eight of another one (which may be several hours away!). The reason it is so difficult to do so is precisely because so many people have been trying to make the Pro Tour, and WOTC wants to make sure that attendance is below a certain threshold. Just as most players recognize the growth and development of their skills, so too should you reassess your aspirations.

I personally have changed my approach to tournament prioritization (favoring payout over thinking, “Will this get me to the Pro Tour eventually?”), and it has been a positive change in my approach to Magic. I still take the game seriously, I still play it often, but my personal aspirations are largely shorter term. We’ll get back to the article now, but I would consider other players to take the same introspective inventory of their own goals.


The enemy fetch lands are under-printed by current standards. The demand for them, however, is driven primarily by Modern and Legacy play (we are just going to roll Vintage into Legacy here, even though the two are wildly different).

Legacy has its supporters and detractors (I consider myself a supporter), but if you were to buy a deck in full today, it is likely going to cost you much more than a Standard deck, and there are many fewer opportunities to play with it competitively. Not owning a Legacy deck restricts Pro Tour aspirations only to the degree that there are three fewer Grands Prix that you can play in a given calendar year, and likely only one in the continent that you live in. The reason why I often suggest to people to ease into Legacy slowly is because so many of the tournaments are going to be at your local store, for very modest prizes. Don’t rush out and buy Esper Deathblade if you can only use it in a couple of SCG Opens a year, where you would need to win a few of them in order to break even.

Modern, whether you choose to accept it or not, is in a similar boat. Even though the format has a grassroots appeal, and has been wrongfully touted as a more budget-conscious alternative to eternal formats, it is still expensive to play with fewer opportunities to achieve at the highest levels (although we are guaranteed a PPTQ season and a PTQ for the time being). Modern’s biggest problem is that it is currently in what I call its “Wild West phase.” Modern, unlike its predecessor Extended, begins at a fixed point in time, Eighth Edition. The player base has more than doubled3 since the release of that set, and design philosophy has evolved significantly (especially with regards to core sets).

In practical terms, this means that there were enough Serum Visions printed for about six million players, even though there are anywhere from twelve to sixteen million currently active players (these numbers are raw, largely because Wizards stays tight-lipped on this type of information). The good news for Modern is that Wizards has stated that it will be reprinting aggressively to help alleviate that imbalance. However, it will happen on WOTC’s own internal time-table. The number-one job of Magic‘s design and development staff is to continue making new and exciting sets and experiences for players, not reprinting old sets (some of which didn’t sell very well anyways).

Things like Modern Masters, promotional cards, and supplemental products are great ways to get new copies of cards out to players, but the best way is through Standard-legal sets (which have much larger and longer printings compared to those other methods). In order for old cards to make it into Standard, though, they need to fit the current design (and more importantly development) philosophies of Magic, while also feeling like they contribute to the set as a whole and don’t waste valuable space (think Daybreak Coronet in MM2 Limited).

It’s possible that the enemy fetch lands would fit well into Battle for Zendikar‘s design, but it’s also possible that they would force development changes and throttle the other elements of the set (I don’t think we will see “Landfall: draw a card” if development knows that Misty Rainforest would be in Standard the entire time). I think that in five years, card availability specifically for Modern will be improved, and in ten years, it will be even better. Sadly, the long-term plan is not also the best short-term plan, but it is refreshing that Wizards is thinking more toward the former than the latter.


BRIEF MULTICOLOR ASIDE: Return to Ravnica having shock lands is more of a coincidence than a precedent. While that cycle has only appeared in Ravnican sets, the lands were named so as to be non-exclusive to any plane (Rosewater even said so when Temple Garden was first printed), and the truth is that that plane needs ten multicolor lands more than Zendikar needs fetchlands (Evolving Wilds at common would be just as frequent an enabler, not to mention the other areas of design space that landfall offers). Don’t assume that Overgrown Tomb and company will only ever be on Ravnica, and don’t assume that only Zendikar has Arid Mesas.


Because cards are not distributed by who is purest of heart and therefore most deserving of them, their means of determined value fall into the hands of the secondary market. In the case of Misty Rainforest and company, their value increased on the knowledge that the supply will not be increasing this fall, and very likely not any time in the immediate future4. Card prices are determined by a multitude of factors (including the one I just mentioned), but blame too often falls on “speculators,” not the larger stores that have a much bigger overall impact5.

In the instance of the enemy fetch lands, the amount of cards on the market dried up almost immediately in response to the announcement. Misty Rainforest went from $35 (I should know, I traded some away days earlier) to $85, even though buylist averages are at roughly $40. Star City Games has just over fifty English non-foil copies in stock (of various conditions) and a buylist price of only $35 for NM copies. The largest determining factor in a card’s value is what a store will pay for it, because that is your guaranteed, demonstrative floor. I suspect that enemy fetch lands will slowly drop in price as more are sold by players than are bought, and they will stabilize somewhere higher than they were before, but lower than they are now. It is unfortunate that this will restrict some players’ ability to compete (at least until a new printing happens), but Wizards excluded them in this instance for the better health of the set and the format, and sometimes that is going to happen (I’m sure they were tested at some point).

In Other News…

I’ve left a lot of this material open-ended because I want to leave enough spaces for (polite) conversation in the comments.

Before I wrap up, though, I want to talk very quickly about Hearthstone, especially in light of its recently announced monthly profits. Many Magic players are very vocally threatening to jump ship to the Blizzard product, but those statements are somewhat disingenuous. Just remember that you aren’t “investing” in Hearthstone as you might with Magic, because there is currently no means of a secondary market for the game (unless, I suppose, if you sell the account, as people have done with World of Warcraft). Also, as Hearthstone‘s audience grows, so will the difficulty of being above average at it, and with that the ability to “go pro” is diminished. It is a fun game, and I really enjoy it, but don’t assume that your purchases will appreciate the same way Magic ones often do.

Thanks for reading, and for my ProTrader regulars, look forward to that set review I’ve been promising next week.

Best,

Ross

1The mana system prevents this from being a guarantee, which is actually one of the best things Magic has going for it—unless it happens to you or me, in which case it is the worst thing ever.

2 Footnote to the aside (a first!): Yes, marketing is the reason why WOTC selected all of the participants for the Community Cup. It is 100 percent to do with appearances, marketability, and generating promotable material. It’s awkward that the actual community didn’t get to select anybody, but because this whole event happens on WOTC’s dime, the company was never going to select someone who couldn’t be a marketable face for the game. If your presence in the community is not something that could be considered family-friendly, then that was going to keep you out whether we had a vote or not.

3 If you want to know more about this, read those two articles that I mentioned at the top.

4 I won’t go deep into my thoughts about the future of the fetch lands, just because I wrote that article last week. Sorry for you new visiting readers, that one is currently behind the paywall.

5 If you think that SCG wasn’t buying up fetch lands when the announcement broke, then you are either naïve or new to Magic.

The Unpredictable Wizards

A long while ago, I made a set of predictions about From the Vault: Angels. I was right about eight out of the 15 cards. And while I think my picks are better, Wizards is always going to do what it wants.

And that’s something we need to keep that in mind going forward. Wizards of the Coast employs some very intelligent and very confusing people. Trying to predict what will and won’t get printed/reprinted/banned/unbanned is an exercise fraught with peril and likely missteps.

Today I want to look at some…curious decisions they have made and see if there’s lessons we can glean.

FTV: Angels

While all of the choices are defensible, there’s a couple of pieces of information that are very clear: Wizards isn’t trying to just increase circulations of cards. This is the third piece of art for Akroma, Angel of Wrath and the second ‘special’ foil printing. If you count the reprint of Duel Deck Anthologies, then that’s the fourth.

That’s not the strangest choice in the set, though. That honor goes to the inclusion of Iona, Shield of Emeria just two months after having her as a mythic in Modern Masters 2015. Iona is a worthy choice to go into the FTV set, but it’s almost as though each of the two sets didn’t know the other was including her. Just one of these two sets would have been enough to increase her copies in circulation, and she was only at $20/$80 before.

From the outside, it’s impossible to say if this was a communication error or a conscious decision to really push Iona into a low price. But since we are on the outside, we are left to wonder what the motivation was. There was a slot in either set that could have been another card, but who knows what could have been.

Fetch lands and Battle for Zendikar

When the name of the fall set was revealed as Battle for Zendikar, the five enemy fetch lands immediately took a dive on price, losing more than half their value in some cases. Writers and financiers and players all jumped to the conclusion that the cycle would be in BfZ.

And then, Mark Rosewater dropped this bomb via tumblr:

BFZ lands

Was there a voice anywhere that said the fetches were NOT in BfZ? Would you have listened if you’d heard one?

For that matter, who had any inkling that Wizards wanted the allied fetches in Modern and would put them in Standard?

Again, we are forced to confront a very basic truth: Wizards works at their own level. This is true of why Duels is now only on the newest Apple versions, why Magic Online has all of its changes (including the still-missing Leagues!) and when it comes to what is and isn’t in any set or product, outsiders are merely tossing darts at the wall while blindfolded.

Building decks at the end of Standard

What would the last two years have been like if Herald of the Pantheon or Starfield of Nyx had been in Theros block, or even way back in Dragon’s Maze? I can’t remember seeing as many cards dedicated to upgrading an archetype as what showed up in Magic Origins. Granted, this is the last core set, and it’s only legal together for a few brief months, but wow. This is another thing we never saw coming. What is the next two sets going to bring for Abzan or Megamorph decks?

Takeaways

So if we can’t accurately predict what Wizards will do, what can we do to gain a little power over the future?

The easiest course of action is to do nothing. Don’t attempt to speculate or predict and don’t attempt to gain from foreknowledge. We’re all just guessing now.

With a little thought, though, we can make some inferences based on negative information. For example, we know that Commander 2015 will be enemy colors. Instead of trying to predict what will be in those sets (my gut tells me to get out on Prophet of Kruphix, for one) we can infer that allied-color cards are safe for now, so go ahead and stock up on things like Privileged Position or Oona, Queen of the Fae.

Keeping today’s lessons in mind, don’t presume that this winter’s Commander decks will have Arid Mesa and its buddies. We need the set of filter lands just as badly from a price perspective, especially the enemy ones that were only in the barely-bought Eventide. There hasn’t really been a big land present in each of the Commander releases so far, but today’s whole point is that we can’t predict accurately what Wizards of the Coast will do.

Still, though, keep in mind that everything will get reprinted eventually. There’s too many outlets. We have Conspiracy, Modern Masters, Clash Packs, Event Decks, judge foils, GP promos, and special releases like foil Force of Will or the foil promo Genesis Hydras being given out when you buy two old packs at my Target. Everything not on the reserved list will be redone. It’s only a matter of time.

Penny Stocks of Tarkir

It’s been a minute since I’ve had a regular article! Thanks for sticking with me. I had to skip a week due to covering the Pro Tour in Vancouver, and last week I had an impromptu article on fetch lands take over my normal spot thanks to the breaking news (which I’m really proud of how the team here covered). Anyway, we’re back to normal this week, and this topic is one I’ve had in mind for a bit and I think is a fun (and profitable) one: penny stocks!

What Are Penny Stocks?

Basically, in the “real world” a penny stock is exactly that: a stock that costs you only pennies to buy but can provide big percentage gains as a result of having such a low buy-in. You make your money with volume, and they’re attractive options for casual investors.

Magic’s penny stocks are much the same. While we have to adjust the definition slightly—I’ve chosen to include cards up to $2—the theory holds, and every year we seemingly see something from this category of cards break out and subsequently shoot up in price. A couple years ago it was Desecration Demon and Nightveil Specter. We see something like this almost every year, and I don’t think this one will be an exception.

So let’s dig in.

Mantis Rider

Mantis Rider

Believe it or not, this little bug has fallen all the way to fifty cents. This thing was nearly $8 at one point!

And while some Jeskai builds have sat this guy on the bench in favor of more burn spells, that won’t necessarily be an option after rotation. Much of the deck’s core will stay in the format to keep it strong, but enough rotates to make room for Mantis Rider again—not to mention that versions of the deck still play this thing as a four-of and do well today.

At near-bulk status, this is a must-have. You’re out nothing if it misses, but the gains could be huge.

Savage Knuckleblade

Savage Knuckleblade

Another card that has seen Standard success but is currently 50 cents. Temur has a lot of tools post-rotation, even if it’s a little out of the limelight now, and between this and the next card on this list, there’s a lot of reason to think the deck could be poised to find a place in the format. With playsets of this card available for a single dollar, I don’t know how you can pass this up right now, even if it means taking a flyer on a fringe deck.

Rattleclaw Mystic

Rattleclaw Mystic

I’ve written about this card before, but I’ll repeat it now: this is the best mana-ramp creature in Standard after Sylvan Caryatid leaves. It’s been slowing trending up but still clocks in under $2, and there’s not way this little guy won’t see continued Standard play next season. I love this as a pickup.

Surrak Dragonclaw/Sagu Mauler

Surrak Dragonclaw

Remember how I said Temur could be poised to break out? These are a few of the cards that make it possible. Sagu Mauler is actually bulk while Surrak is a dollar, but both of these are 6/6 creatures for five mana, which is conveniently easy to achieve a turn early thanks to Rattleclaw Mystic. Both of these could flame out into nothing, but both have great upside in the weeks following Rotation.

Sagu Mauler

Utter End

Utter End

Sure, there are lots of better options for removal available now, but that won’t be the case forever. Utter End is as flexible as you want, and while it is expensive in a gameplay sense at four mana, it’s super cheap in a fiscal sense at 75 cents. It’s possible the Game Day promos are a better play here, but the lowest risk certainly rests with the regular copies.

Shaman of the Great Hunt

Shaman of the Great Hunt

This thing saw a little fringe play upon its release, but has since fallen off the map. As a mythic from a small set, there’s definitely solid upside here, though be aware you’re taking a super speculative route with this one. It’s a very strong curve-topper for aggressive decks, but the red decks of the format don’t lack that even after rotation, and the decks that can make use of the final ability may not need it, either. Still, the price upside on this is what makes it worth a look, even if it never quite gets there.

Outpost Siege

Outpost Siege

We already see this Siege get a ton of sideboard play, and there’s no reason to expect that won’t continue or that the card may even move to main decks after rotation. I don’t fully understand why this is under a dollar given all that, but it’s cheap enough to warrant a spot on this list. After all, sometimes the market is just slow to react: Dromoka’s Command is all over the place and yet is only $2. Sometimes if something seems wrong, it’s not because you’re missing something, it’s because it is wrong.

While we’re at it, if you want to talk bulk rare Sieges, Frontier Siege could be huge in ramping to eldrazi and is only 50 cents. Just saying.

Surrak, the Hunt Caller

Surrak, the Hunt Caller

Dragons of Tarkir offers us fewer options than the other sets in the block, both because it’s a set that wasn’t drafted a ton (a large set but never drafted alone), and because there are already a number of expensive cards floating over the arbitrary $2 mark. Still, there are a couple cards worth mentioning, and the smaller Surrak is one of them.

This saw a little play upon its release., the stats are solid (trades with Siege Rhino), and the ability is good and not that difficult to turn on. At 75 cents, it’s worth having at least a playset of these for yourself. Remember, ramping into eldrazi and having the ability to give them haste could very well be a thing we’re concerned about in three months.

Dragon Whisperer

Dragon Whisperer

Red decks still have a lot of gas post-rotation, but with a few spots opening up, we could see the Whisperer slip in. It’s both an acceptable two-drop and a way to sink some late-game mana into a powerful effect. I’m not a huge fan necessarily, but as a mythic, the upside is definitely there.

Icefall Regent

Icefall Regent

Another dragon that has seen competitive play in the past. It peaked over $4 and could possible find itself a home again post-rotation. At just over a dollar, it earns a spot on our list, even if it seems like a long-shot.

Wrapping Up

I realize I’ve thrown a lot of cards at you, and it’s a certainty that not all of these will hit either play-wise or financially. I realize that, but I view my job as a writer to give you the options and my thoughts on them and leave it to you to make your own decisions.

I’m sure there are cards on this list I like more than some of you do, and undoubtedly you have favorites that I’m not sold on. Regardless, these are the cards that most fit the profile of “super-inexpensive card to break out post-rotation,” and all of these offer a chance to get ahead of what you think the Standard metagame will look like in a few months.

Thanks for reading,

Corbin Hosler

@Chosler88 on Twitter

Conditional Value

“I just want the cheapest copy you have. It’s for personal play, and I’m just trying to build the deck on a budget.”

–Probably one of my local customers

Man, I misuse quotations a lot. You wouldn’t know this if I didn’t tell you, but I didn’t actually  document that quote from some local guy I know. I mean, people have said similar stuff to me over the years, but I probably shouldn’t use actual quotation marks for it.

Anyway, what have we got to write about this week? Fetches? Boring. From the Vault: Lack of Linvala I really don’t care. I’d rather continue on my track as a brilliant comedy writer who basically wrote A Modest Proposal in MTG finance form (it’s right freaking here, for those who haven’t read it). As much as I’d love to continue writing satire and reading the comments, I do kind of get paid to provide useful and actionable financial information about our lovable little economy. I’m hopping back to more of a Finance 101 topic this week, where we’ll go over card conditions and why you shouldn’t write off buying and selling slightly played (SP), moderately played (MP), and heavily played (HP) cards.

Tell Me More

Let’s go back to that opening made-up quote. This more often applies to Legacy, Modern, or EDH than Standard, where the prices on dual lands, fetches, and older staples are symbolic of there not being enough to go around. Not all of the original dual lands have withstood the past twenty years of wear, and the ones that have been used as sandpaper have a price tag to show it. As a result of this, players on a budget who just care about the end result of finishing their decks are more often than not willing to sacrifice card condition to complete that goal.

Take a look at this Tundra, for example: it was one of the first dual lands I ever picked up, and I paid approximately 50 percent of retail for it, because it looks like someone smoked a cigarette directly onto the card for two days straight. (Seriously. The pictures below don’t capture just how yellow the card is.)

smoke tundra 2 smoke

“Yes, DJ. Used merchandise sells for cheaper than brand new stuff. That’s obvious. Why are you telling me this?”

Well, Mr. Stereotypical Devil’s Advocate Who So Many MTG Financiers Invoke in Their Articles, I’ll tell you a few things that you can use to take advantage of in the field of less-than-NM cards.

tweet

StarCityGames.com gets a lot of flak for having singles that are  often priced slightly higher than the rest of the internet, but I’ve never seen a more strict grading system in action when ordering cards from the company. Last year, I ordered 40 copies of Ghave, Guru of Spores from SCG. Ten of those were NM and 30 were SP, and I paid 50 cents less on each of the SP copies. When the cards arrived, I couldn’t even tell that some of them were SP. I ended up grading around half of them as NM, and sold several on TCGplayer and out of my local display case as NM with no complaints.

If you’re ever looking to go deep on a particular spec target, I highly recommend checking out the SP and MP sections of SCG. My local customers will tell you that I’m a tough grader, and even I had trouble finding marks on the cards that would justifiy them being slightly played. Another side benefit of ordering from SCG will be that you’ll be guaranteed to have your order shipped to you, with no concern over cancellation or shipping worries.

On the Other Hand…

Let’s say you have a card that you graded as NM, and you throw it up on TCGplayer. You sell the card, package it up, ship it out, you know the drill. You’re happy to have a sale. However, you get a message about a week later. The buyer is unhappy with the condition of the card because he found a nick or two that he believes knocks it down to SP. Now they want a refund—either a partial return on their purchase for the condition or a full refund with them shipping the card back to you. Sometimes they’re correct, and sometimes they’re just being too critical of a grader. Neither of those choices are very appealing though, and unfortunately, there’s not a whole lot you can do about it.

However, I’ve never had anyone counterclaim my grading of SP or worse cards. The line in the sand between SP and MP can often be blurry, and I’ve definitely listed some cards on TCGplayer as SP that some people might argue as being MP. Even so, buyers have never messaged me about it. They purchased the card expecting some amount of wear, and were satisfied with their purchase costing less than an otherwise minty version would have run them. If you err on the safe side and list it as SP, you’ll remove most picky graders from the equation and not suffer a huge loss in the process. I’m not suggesting to list this thing…

damdam2

…as “SP” and cross your fingers hoping that you don’t get hate mail, but you can probably get away with posting it as HP instead of just straight up “damaged.”

A Rough Guideline

If you’re new to Magic or to the seller’s side of the game, I recommend checking out TCGplayer’s condition guide for grading. While I think it might be a little bit too strict on the definition of LP or MP, it certainly gets the job done if you’re trying to successfully sell on TCGplayer or eBay.

Workhorse

Only the NM Shall Pass

When trying to sell off SP and worse cards, it’s important to remember that some businesses don’t allow you to trade or sell them. PucaTrade is a website where a lot of heated discussion over condition takes place. Some users don’t take the time to read the requirements of sending a card, and don’t understand that unless notifying their trade partner beforehand, it is not okay to ship out cards that are SP or worse condition while expecting the full point value.

StrikeZoneOnline is a vendor with a buylist that only accepts NM cards, and grades extremely strictly. If you send cards that are even close to questionable on condition, StrikeZone will send you back the cards that they rejected and remove the cost of shipping from your payment amount. If you’re an inexperienced buylister and ship to them expecting to get a simple “condition discount” like CardKingdom offers, then you’ll end up very disappointed. StrikeZone will almost always pay top dollar on foils if you keep your eye out on their graph line on MTGPrice, but you need to be sure that there’s absolutely no clouding, smudging, or edge wear at all before you send the company cards. Interestingly enough, I’ve found StrikeZone’s grading system to be much more lax in person when I sit down to sell to them at Grands Prix. I don’t know if this is because it’s harder to be strict when you have someone sitting across from you to dispute your grading, but I’ve definitely shipped the company SP cards in person and been paid in full.

Everything Comes Back to Cube/Commander

It seems like every time I write an article, there’s at least some mention of Commander or Cube. These two formats allow for some of the most unique personal expression in Magic, and have some of the more interesting house rules or restrictions when building, so it’s no wonder that financiers can end up finding unique ways to cater to these types of players. I once attended an SCG Open and spectated a draft where a player had a cube composed of entirely HP or worse non-foil cards.

He didn’t want to pay the full price to obtain his otherwise expensive cube, so he decided to make a game out of building the cube itself, while at the same time helping the cube be more affordable. The Jace, the Mind Sculptor in that cube looked like it had been used to paint somebody’s driveway, and certain text boxes weren’t even visible anymore. However, he proudly explained that he had only paid $40 to a vendor that was dying to get rid of it, as he ticked up the loyalty on a card who’s initial loyalty placement in the bottom right had been peeled away at some point.

Jace, the Mind Sculptor

If you’re trying to build a budget cube without dropping the power level to commons and uncommons only, then this might be your way to go. Challenge yourself to only include cards that you find in the parking lot, or something to that effect, and you’ll be done in no time. While I’ve never actually seen someone do the same with a Commander deck, it could certainly be done, and it would be a much cheaper alternative that comes with a story every time you sit down to play it.

End Step (NSFL)

If you’re a fellow Redditor and looking to see some of the most destroyed cards that Magic has to offer, I recommend indulging in MTGgore. While a “flip it or rip it” phase seems to have taken over a little bit, there’s some sort of sick pleasure obtained from looking at picture of a Legacy deck that just went through the wash. It’s like watching a dumpster fire: there’s no value to it, but you just can’t look away.

 

MAGIC: THE GATHERING FINANCE ARTICLES AND COMMUNITY