Really Reconsidering Ravnica Remastered Reprints

Sometimes, you just can’t help a title. Alliteration is just so much fun!

Ravnica Remastered is official today, and while the preordering has been fun, it’s also emblematic of the clobbering that prices are about to take. This is a reprint set, so everything exists already and the goal/expectation is that regular copies are going to end up notably cheaper than they were.

This reprint set is made up of lots of special versions too! Borderless, Anime, Retro-Frame, and even Serialized versions will be available too! In previous reprint sets like this, there tends to be a spread of prices for the different versions, with the more basic ones getting to a low price indeed.

The good news is, we can get those basic copies super cheap once these cards hit their lows. So today, I want to look at my favorite targets to drop low before reaching new highs in a few months. I don’t think the rebound will be faster than six months, and I also wouldn’t be shocked when it takes a couple of years.

These are mythics and rares, and as an additional complication, there might be a quick turnaround for profit on these if it looks like extra product is being destroyed rather than letting the set undersell.

Guardian Project (137k EDHREC decks)

As always, EDHREC is not the only data source we should refer to, but it’s very helpful data to have. It’s only the most online of Magic players, the most invested in the game, the ones who are eager to list a deck online. I still haven’t put even one on there. 

Still, Guardian Project is a card that basically cantrips every creature spell. There’s some spells like Garruk’s Uprising that will allow you to draw a card for big tokens, but GP giving you a card no matter what in the Commander format is big game. It’s a staple now and will be a staple going forward. 

It’s already down to the $8 range and $5 is in play. My usual habit is to wait a couple months, but this is one of the cards that I’ll be watching to see how cheap it is in a month, looking for the price to start rising.

Teferi, Time Raveler (46k decks)

Tef3ri (as he’s commonly labeled) was once a Modern staple, a key component to making sure that what you want to do, you get to do. Decks have moved away from the card, and being banned in Pioneer hasn’t helped his cause either.

Planeswalkers aren’t less good in Commander exactly, it’s just that you have to manage three people trying to kill it instead of just the one opponent. I would like to believe that he can make another comeback, but it’ll take a big shift in the metagame to pull that off. Those who like special versions have retro frames, stained glass, and the alternate anime art to choose from, so I don’t see myself getting in on this again unless some new combo shows up.

Bruvac the Grandiloquent (16k decks plus 3500 more as Commander)

Bruvac is about to be a case study in ‘why does low supply for a card result in a high price’ or what could also be called ‘how low can this go?’ Originally in the first Jumpstart set, and then given an appearance on The List, Bruvac has never had a large quantity of copies available, and the price shows that.

Copies are on TCG for preorder at $24 and that price is going to drop hard. Mill decks are neat in Commander, and even have a home in Modern for those who love their Crabs, but it’s hard to do consistently. The demand just isn’t there, and if it weren’t for some cards who were sub-$5 before RVR’s printing, I would expect this to be near the bottom. I suspect this will be available near $10 for a very long time.

Cyclonic Rift (registered in 500,000 EDHREC decks!!)

I probably don’t need to sell you on this card. It’s a poster child for a reason, the Gold-Chocobo-better-than-S-Rank staple. It’s cast, recast, copied, all in the name of being unfairly broken. Over the years, the regular version has made it to $40 at least once, because it’s just one of the best things you can do in blue.

Amazingly, we haven’t had a lot of special versions here. Double Masters had a borderless version in the VIP packs, and Commander Masters gave us a foil-etched a year ago. For one of the iconic spells of Magic’s premier format…that’s not a lot. Of course, now in RVR we get a Retro, and an Anime Borderless, and a serialized version if you want to have the rarest version of the most popular card.

I’m expecting regular copies to drift down a little, but the truth is, there’s a lot of regular copies out there and patience pays off very well. There won’t be a lot of undercutting, as you don’t need to be in a hurry to sell. This weathered the CMM printing quite well, the etched foils look especially tempting, and RVR should lower prices a little before they begin recovering. Should be $35 again before Christmas.

Crypt Ghast (84k decks) – Finally, let’s talk about a card that just doesn’t get played enough. So many decks are running Urborg and Coffers, why aren’t they using the third leg of the tripod? I think there’s some factors working against the card: people think Extort’s reminder text requires black and white in the identity, or they think only basic Swamps are eligible. 

Happily, neither of those things is true, but this card is falling fast. Retro copies are down to $5 already, and strangely, that’s less expensive than the regular nonfoils are. That’s a reversal I don’t expect to stay true for long, but I also thing it will take people a while to change their prices on the older versions of the card. 

There’s also never been a special printing, and with both a retro frame and an anime borderless coming out, these regulars are really going to take a dive. Be patient before buying, even when it comes to personal copies. There’s going to be a lot left over here, so don’t get in anytime soon.

Cliff (@WordOfCommander) 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 official substitute teacher of the MTG Fast Finance podcast. If you’re ever at a GP and you see a giant flashing ‘CUBE DRAFT’ sign, go over, say hi, and be ready to draft.

The Schedule for 2024, for speculation and avoidance

Welcome to a new year, and with Ravnica Remastered arriving in a week, Murders at Karlov Manor on February 8, then Universes Beyond: Fallout exactly one month after that on March 8! Yes, the timeline is jam-packed full of releases, but there is helpful information in each release that’s coming up this year.

We can do a lot, even with limited information, and one example is Doubling Season. With Ravnica Remastered on the horizon, I stayed the heck away from Doubling Season and other Ravnica-themed cards. Doubling Season ended up being printed twice in a row in other bonus sheets, but it worked anyway.

So with that in mind, let’s go through the calendar, and see what we should do or not do coming into the coming year.

First off, let’s get the layout for the year, and if you want to watch the whole Wizards panel with the teasers, here’s the link

One caveat about the whole dang thing: There’s a lot of places for reprints to happen outside of the themes of a set. We know that Special Guests are now a thing in Play Boosters, which will premier in Murders at Karlov Manor, and the List will now be 40 cards plus the ten Guests. No more Draft Boosters, which means that more of these packs are opened and a List inclusion will probably mean the price takes a hit.

Special Guests are supposed to be “highly desired reprints with creative that adapts it to the world,” according to Mark Rosewater. We will see about the first WTF inclusions as the year goes on.

Plus, Secret Lairs are still a thing, and the recent announcement regarding the print runs and faster shipping won’t make much of a difference if your spec gets caught in the web of reprints.  So there’s a lot of potholes that are invisible by nature, and best of luck to us all in avoiding those.

Right now, we have the whole list for Ravnica Remastered, and that topic is now blessedly done. All that remains is to see how much a couple of Serialized Foil Dragons are going to cost me, since it takes 6400 packs to get one specific Dragon. I’m also interested to see how under-opened the set is, as we know demand is soft but they printed 3.2 million of the Collector Boosters, and that could lead to either fire-sale distributor pricing or just massive amounts of product being destroyed.

Murders at Karlov Manor is about to get previews, and while we’re told that the set won’t be guild-themed or -focused as a regular Ravnica set would be, one of the banner mythics is an Azorius investigator and one of the Clue special cards is a Boros Soldier commander. I have my doubts about the color pairs not mattering too much, but with the set so close, I’d prefer to hold back on anything related to that theme anyway.

Fallout being a set of Commander decks in the style of Warhammer 40K means that I’m not super-worried about reprints, since those decks were mostly new cards mixed with known lands. We know some of the Commanders for the set, and those point at themes that encourage speculative buying. I promise, I’ll have more for you on that topic before long, I already wrote about (and built!) Mr. House’s deck.

Outlaws of Thunder Junction is confirmed to be about villains from Magic worlds coming together to do bad things. From this key art, a whole lot of crazy theories have popped up:

Depending on who you believe, and if you think dead means dead or ‘mostly dead’ in previous sets, those characters can be a lot of different folks. Big baddie with wings and horns? Rakdos and Ob Nixilis come to mind. Half-sized? Could be Squee, Tinybones, Krenko, or someone else. The medusa is heavily favored to be Vraska, but my favorite speculation is that Oko makes a triumphant return to the stage. We’ll see.

The year’s biggest release will come around the start of summer: Modern Horizons 3. 

I expect great things from this set, and I’ll likely write a couple of different times about what to do when we get a little information, but I feel confident about a couple of big points for this set.

First, I think we get the original Eldrazi Titans. The prices for Ulamog and Kozilek are above $35 even for the basic versions, and Emrakul would be up there if not for the Commander ban. (I’m not advocating for the unban, just saying why she’s $15.) It’s possible that they mix-and-match, and give us Emrakul, the Promised End, which has a bigger price tag, but I think that it’s been so long since Double Masters 2022 that people are ready for more. 

Second, allied fetchlands are in MH3. MH2 gave us the enemy shocks, which hadn’t had an appearance at regular rare since Modern Masters 2017. The allied lands were last in Khans of Tarkir, ten years ago! Polluted Delta is roughly twice the price of Scalding Tarn. Wooded Foothills is too! 

I expect these lands to be in the set and I expect their price to go very, very low. There will be a lot of these packs out there, just as with Modern Horizons 2, and so the time will be right to load up your decks with cheap fetches.

I used to be certain that we’d get the cycle of pitch Elementals as reprints here, as having the cycle all be at least $20 would be good anchors for the mythics, but I’m not sure what the banning of Fury means for all this. It’s possible that the set hadn’t gone to print when the card was banned, and perhaps we get a ‘fixed’ Fury who does 3 damage and doesn’t have double strike. It’s hard to predict or foresee given these conditions.

The other sets this year are pretty damn nebulous, but keep in mind that details are inevitably going to leak and we’ll do our best to keep you informed.

Innistrad Remastered is due the very beginning of 2025, and that’s a very important detail. That could be where we get the Emrakul, the Promised End reprint, as well as one for Edgar Markov. Snapcaster Mage and Parallel Lives should be on the agenda, in addition to Cryptolith Rite, Meathook Massacre, Toxrill, the Corrosive, and the slowlands of both Midnight Hunt and Crimson Vow. Anything associated with Innistrad should be viewed as untouchable until that set arrives.

Cliff (@WordOfCommander) 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 official substitute teacher of the MTG Fast Finance podcast. If you’re ever at a GP and you see a giant flashing ‘CUBE DRAFT’ sign, go over, say hi, and be ready to draft.

Six Months of Predictions, for Auld Lang Syne

It’s the New Year, people! Time for reflecting on how the year went, what worked and what didn’t work. For me, in this space, that means it’s time for a dose of honesty, for soothing my ego and for teaching me humility.

I’ve written about how I want to change how I choose my specs, for reasons that will be reinforced today. I want to buy cards with a reason beyond ‘It’s a staple that got cheap.’ I want to anticipate moves, commanders, new decks. So let’s dive into cards I said were worth some of your money, and what I was right about, and what I was wrong about.

On MTG Fast Finance, we do a review of our picks, and I do that here as well. Today, we’re looking just at cards I called out in the first half of this year, as the more recent things haven’t had time to shine up yet. 

On February 10, I said you should sell the hell out of Mercurial Spelldancer, as it was going for $11 early based on some great Legacy interactions.

It doesn’t take a galaxy brain to sell cards early, but holding too long is an extremely common error in this realm. When the price is hot, get out. This is also an excellent demonstration of how most rares go, even new ones. If it’s not picked up by multiple formats quickly, then it’s headed to the bulk bin.

A week later, I looked at the Pro Tour that was coming up and told you to be ready on Indomitable Creatvitiy, at the time $15 or so for the nonfoils. Within a month, thanks to the PT, it had doubled to $30. I told you to sell into the coming hype, and I hope you did, because you needed to be out before the end of summer:

Currently $6, and still no reprints! It’s a great graph that shows yet again why you need to sell right away and not get too greedy. If you bought at $15, and it hits $30, you should be listing the card because metagames shift or reprints come along. It was a small-set mythic, and I understand why you’d want to hold out, but this is why we say to sell into hype: when the hype goes away, so does the value.

I also would not be in a rush to stock up on these. The combo has fallen out of favor in the current meta, and I’d be fine seeing the deck do well and buying up some $10 copies at that point. 

When we found out that The Ur-Dragon would be in Commander Masters, there were a couple of cards I called out on 2/26. I’ve been right that with new copies of His Eminence running around, there would be a lot more people building the deck and EDHREC bears that out, with The Ur-Dragon being a top 5 Commander for most weeks since its new printing.

In that same article, I said to buy Hellkite Courser at $40 in FEA and it is still $40. I think this is an attention problem, because there’s no Commander that the Courser fits better. I feel like a Secret Lair printing is due for this card, but we’ll see. 

In that same article, I pointed out Urza’s Incubator (Borderless foil) got as low as $15 nonfoil/$20 foil and is now trending upwards. If you bought at those lows, I would start to sell the copies you picked up, as we are now up to $30 for nonfoil and $40 for the foils. This is a premium card in typal decks and more copies are inevitably coming down the pipeline.Take your profits and get out.

On March 3rd, I told you to be aware of All Will Be One. I said it would fall a little further from its then price of $11 on 3/3, and it did, down to the $7 range before spiking hard in May. I hope you sold into that spike, when it hit $20, because now it’s available for around $11 again, but creeping upwards.

A week later, I wrote about Oil-Slick foils and had one of my biggest misses: Ichormoon Gauntlet was $35 and is currently just under $20. Ouch. Most of the others have gone down or stayed flat, but Solphim has gone up $10.

A case study followed after that on March 17, when I gave a series of picks about Tom Bombadil, who I felt was going to set some Sagas and Saga accessories into the stratosphere. Here’s the summary: 

Kiora bests the Sea God picked at $3 or $6 in foil, hit $17/$22 in July

Historian’s Boon was available for fifty cents in nonfoil EA, got up to $3 in July

Hex Parasite was called at $4 regular and $15 foil, went up to $9/$22 but didn’t get the predicted double up on the foil.

Resourceful Defense went $3 to $6, handy double up.

However, I was wrong about Hall of Heliod’s Generosity. It was $12 then, and with Tom’s release it perked up a little but is now $6. It’s still an extremely busted card for Tom, and I’m surprised the inclusion rate isn’t a lot higher.

After the first wave of March of the Machine previews, I made some predictions: 

I said wait on Faerie Mastermind when it was at $8, got down to $4, now $9.

I told you to buy Tribute of the World Tree at $3, it’s also now $9.

However, I must confront two very incorrect calls as well: Invasion of Ikoria, I said it would be $1 and it never went under $5. I also missed badly on Etali, Primal Conqueror, I didn’t see his Commander popularity or the combo/reanimator decks coming at all. Big ouchies.

With Aftermath, I looked at the Halo foils on 5/19, and my mistakes are best summarized as being too early:

Sarkhan Soul Aflame did indeed go under $50, can now be had for $25. Mega-oopsies.

Ob Nixilis at least went up by $10, but Training Grounds went down to $8 from $24.

Coppercoat Vanguard is indeed seeing some play, but every version is cheaper now than it was then. I just needed to be more patient.

Finally, on 5/26 I peeked back at Dominaria United. Sheoldred, the Apocalypse hasn’t caught a reprint or a ban yet, so all versions keep climbing and they aren’t going to stop until the reprint or the ban happens. It’s in lots of formats, though rotation in late 2025 might affect the price a little, that’s 18 months away!

I’m surprised that Leyline Binding has gone down in price, though it’s all over the place. If Up the Beanstalk had not been banned, perhaps it would have had a chance but the graph says that’s unlikely.

I hope this look back helped you as much as it did me. We’ve got to be honest and empirical, looking for trends and rules, so stay tuned for the next one of these!

Cliff (@WordOfCommander) 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 official substitute teacher of the MTG Fast Finance podcast. If you’re ever at a GP and you see a giant flashing ‘CUBE DRAFT’ sign, go over, say hi, and be ready to draft.

The Mana Math for Ravnica Remastered

Welcome back to another installment of Mana Math, where I take the numbers we’re given about a set and turn that into easy-to-understand information about how hard it will be to open the card you really want.

Ravnica Remastered has some awesome cards, including a whopping 64 cards that are serialized to 500 copies, and some retro frame shocks, plus outstanding anime art! Let’s get to the cards, and the odds, and all the numbers you want.

We’re told right out of the gate that you have a 1% chance of opening a serialized retro frame card. With 64 options, that’s 32,000 unique cards. If that’s 1% of the total Collector Boosters out there, then we know there’s approximately 3.2 million Collector Booster packs, or 266,667 Collector Booster boxes.

Keep that number in mind, because you can plug that in with the other numbers I’m going to give you, and we’ll know exactly how many copies of a card were printed.

A caveat: Our vendor partners and distributor sources have mentioned that orders for Ravnica Remastered are low. This represents both the potential for things to be more expensive, as less is ordered and opened, or for a glut of underpriced product to show up later in the year. There’s also the chance that Wizards destroys the leftover packs, as we saw with Modern Horizons 2 back in February:

One thing Wizards didn’t give us directly was a list of serialized cards. Serialized cards are all in the Retro frame this time around, and the ones that are specific to the Collector Booster are not counted. Here’s the list:

Serialized RaresSerialized Mythic Rares
Blazing Archon
Blind Obedience
Ghostway
Copy Enchantment
Spark Double
Tidespout Tyrant
Crypt Ghast
Infernal Tutor
Massacre Girl
Arclight Phoenix
Hellkite Tyrant
Krenko, Mob Boss
Legion Warboss
Mizzix’s Mastery
Birds of Paradise
Chord of Calling
Golgari Grave-Troll
Life from the Loam
Borborygmos Enraged
Cindervines
Deathrite Shaman
Dreadbore
Lavinia, Azorius Renegade
Lazav, the Multifarious
Mindleech Mass
Niv-Mizzet, Parun
Prime Speaker Zegana
Rakdos, Lord of Riots
Savra, Queen of the Golgari
Sphinx’s Revelation
Stitch in Time
Tajic, Legion’s Edge
Teysa, Orzhov Scion
Tolsimir Wolfblood
Voidslime
Bottled Cloister
Chromatic Lantern
Illusionist’s Bracers
Pariah’s Shield
Seal of the Guildpact
Sword of the Paruns
Blood Crypt
Breeding Pool
Godless Shrine
Hallowed Fountain
Overgrown Tomb
Sacred Foundry
Steam Vents
Stomping Ground
Temple Garden
Watery Grave
Divine Visitation
Bruvac the Grandiloquent
Cyclonic Rift
Dark Confidant
Lord of the Void
Ilharg, the Raze-Boar
Utvara Hellkite
Guardian Project
Protean Hulk
Aurelia, Exemplar of Justice
Karlov of the Ghost Council
Master of Cruelties
Cloudstone Curio

I don’t know why they didn’t want to give us this list directly, but here you go.

Additionally, there’s a subset of cards that is available in retro frame but only in the Collector Booster, because they are not fun in Limited or are part of strategies that aren’t supported in the Draft Booster experience. Some of them I can totally understand, others are a bit more of a surprise.

These are NOT available in serialized versions. Sorry to disappoint the Thespian’s Stage and Maze’s End players.

CommonUncommonRareMythic Rare
Shambling ShellSphere of Safety Aetherize
Narcomoeba 
Turnabout
Creeping Chill 
Darkblast 
Shattering Spree
Perilous Forays
Wilderness Reclamation
Magewright’s Stone
Rest in Peace Gigantoplasm
Pack Rat
Supreme Verdict
Pithing Needle
Karn’s Bastion
Thespian’s Stage
Enter the Infinite
Niv-Mizzet Reborn
Maze’s End

In some sets, all the sweet versions can be distributed across multiple slots of the Collector Booster, but that’s not going to be the case with RVR. 

There are good cards in those other slots, but RVR Collector Boosters are going to be a very swingy experience and that last slot is going to make or break the pack. All the foils are there, and while some of the nonfoils should keep a price of a few bucks, my expectations are pretty low. 

We get a breakdown of that last slot:

Let’s get into what we can get here, and just how rare each of those is. 

Type/Rarity (# of options)Percent chance for any card of that categoryPercent chance for a specific card of that category# of CBs to open one specific card from that category
Traditional Foil Retro Frame Rare (51)55.2%1.09%92.39
Traditional Foil Retro Frame Mythic Rare (13)5.3%0.4%245.3
Traditional Foil Retro Frame CB Exclusive Rare (7)10.6%1.5%66.04
Traditional Foil Retro Frame CB Exclusive Mythic Rare (3)2.1%0.7%142.9
Traditional Foil Borderless Anime Rare (17)13.4%0.79%126.8
Traditional Foil Borderless Anime Planeswalker Mythic Rare (3)2.1%0.7%142.9
Traditional Foil Borderless Anime Mythic Rare (11)4%0.36%275
Traditional Foil Borderless Shock Land Rare (10)7%0.7%142.9
Serialized Double Rainbow Foil Retro Frame (64)1%0.0166400

This slot is going to have some wild variance, but remember that 65.8% of packs, or just about two out of three, will have a foil Retro Rare, not even a foil anime version of a card. If you add those rares in, you’re looking at nearly 4-in-5 packs (79.2%) and adding in shocks gets you to 86%. 

Mythics and serialized cards are present in this last slot for just 14.5% of packs, or just a little more often than one in 8 packs. The average CB box, with twelve packs, will have approximately 1.7 mythics. It’s not like mythics are the only things worth money, but Cyclonic Rift is one of the big upshifts to mythic, and having more of those would have helped the EV of these boxes.

The second-to-last slot, with nonfoil borderless anime cards or the shockland, is the best bet because of what it has, but at the same time, because there’s less options there’s going to be that many more of the cards. Let’s look at the specifics: 

Type/Rarity (# of options)Percent chance for any card of that categoryPercent chance for a specific card of that category# of CBs to open one specific card from that category
Non-foil borderless anime rare (32)52%1.625%61.53
Non-foil borderless anime planeswalker mythic rares (2)5.5%2.75%36.36
Non-foil borderless anime mythic rares (11)15%1.36%73.3
Borderless shock land rares (10)27.5%2.75%36.36

Now, let’s use that 3.2 million figure and say how many copies of a card will be printed, approximately. I find this useful when thinking of what the prices should be:

CardApprox # of copies totalCardApprox # of copies total
Retro Foil Steam Vents22,393Nonfoil borderless Steam Vents88,000
Borderless Foil Anime Utvara Hellkite11,636Nonfoil borderless anime Utvara Hellkite43,656
Borderless Foil Anime Chromatic Lantern25,236Nonfoil borderless anime Chromatic Lantern52,007

I yearn for the days when there was a clear and consistent ratio, but sadly, those days are gone. For some cards, the foils are 4x as rare as the nonfoils, and for others, it’s only 2x.

Finally, let’s get into some specific cards, and their drop rates.

Card/treatmentApprox. number of CBs needed to find one copy (approx.)
Retro Foil Tidespout Tyrant92.39
Retro Foil Bruvac the Grandiloquent245.3
Borderless Anime Foil Crypt Ghast 126.8
Retro Foil Watery Grave142.9
Borderless Anime Foil Cyclonic Rift275
Serialized Double Rainbow Retro Frame Steam Vents6400

Again, I hope you use these numbers to inform your buying plans. The highs on this set are going to be amazing, but there’s going to be a lot of Collector Boosters opened that contain chaff that wasn’t worth the pack. Opening packs is always a swingy experience, but that experience is going to be even more of a rollercoaster this time around. 

As always, if you have questions about my methods or results, please feel free to reach out on Twitter/X or in the ProTrader Discord. 

Cliff (@WordOfCommander) 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 official substitute teacher of the MTG Fast Finance podcast. If you’re ever at a GP and you see a giant flashing ‘CUBE DRAFT’ sign, go over, say hi, and be ready to draft.

MAGIC: THE GATHERING FINANCE ARTICLES AND COMMUNITY