This week, I’m not feeling the stuff from Crimson Vow. It’s not that I have over-written about the topic, but I think EDH is in a bit of a rut it may never recover from. There were 14 Legendary creatures released in 1997 and today, there are 24 new ones every 2 months. There simply isn’t the design space to come up with novel commanders at that pace. The result? They come up with exactly as many novel commanders as they used to and have given us tons and tons of filler, recycling commanders quickly. Sometimes it’s subtle, sometimes it’s Gretchen Titchwillow.
Toxrill is very cool and gave us what we like to see in this column – old cards in low supply that will spike quickly as soon as people realize they’re indispensible in the deck, which ends up being popular. The specs aren’t obvious so that people who don’t plan to build the deck buy en masse, giving you ample time to track down copies, but since the cards actually go in the deck (and the deck is actually good) you won’t have any issues selling the cards given the organic demand. Let people claw each other to pieces fighting over $20 copies of Abundance, a card that combos with a 7 mana creature that isn’t even the deck’s commander – we’re over here paying $4 for Hunted Horror (which doubled since we wrote that article, by the way). We get 3 Toxrills a year, though, whether we get 10 new Legendary creatures or 100. Once you write about Toxrill, what else is there?
Well, it turns out I have done a bit of a “yadda yadda yadda” with some of the precon cards lately. We’re still figuring out how we want to separate things out over on EDHREC, so we (I) didn’t talk much about AFR commander specifically, but since the supply is basically set on those, things are starting to move. Let’s look at what is moving and what’s next.
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It’s been around seven months since we had the Mystical Archive cards released along with the Strixhaven set, and it’s very possible that we’ll get another similar set of cards at some point in the future, but until then I think that there are still some good opportunities to be had with the Mystical Archive cards we’ve got at the moment.
Chaos Warp (MA Foil)
Price today: $10 Possible price: $20
Until we got the Mystical Archive version back in April, Chaos Warp had only ever had one foil printing in Commander’s Arsenal, and being the most popular red EDH card of all time it moved up to around $30 before we got the fresh foil printings. I think that both the global and Japanese art versions are superior to the old art/foiling, and we should see prices rise over the next few months as people upgrade old copies and buy in fresh for new decks etc.
Global art MA foils are around $10 on TCGPlayer at the moment, and I think those should be good for a double up over the next year or less. Japanese art foils are already $25+, but with only 27 listings on TCGPlayer and a reasonably steep ladder, I think those could even hit $50 in a similar timeframe. Prices in Europe are similar or higher, so not much arbitrage opportunity there, but still a decent buy-in if you’re in the market.
Demonic Tutor (MA Foil)
Price in Europe: €47 ($53) Price in US: $65 Possible price: $80
Moving on from the most popular red card of all time to the most popular black card of all time, Demonic Tutor is undoubtedly one of the biggest EDH staples there is. Compared to Chaos Warp it’s had its fair share of premium printings, but they’re all well over $100 and so this Mystical Archive version might be the one a lot of people turn to for a more affordable premium option.
In the US, TCGPlayer already has the global art MA foils starting at $65, whereas over in Europe they can be had a decent bit cheaper for €47-50 ($53-58). I think that in time this version could get over $100 in line with the other premium copies of Demonic Tutor, but should be good to get up over $80 in 12 months or less. Arbitrage from Europe is pretty good right now, and although the immediate gains aren’t huge, it makes for a better profit over time if you can get them.
Blue Sun’s Zenith (MA Foil)
Price today: $5 Possible price: $15
Finishing things off today with a slightly less (but still very) popular card, the global art version of Blue Sun’s Zenith is criminally cheap at the moment. For a card that doesn’t have a premium version other than the original Mirrodin foil, $5 for a card in over 26,000 EDH decks seems wrong to me. It’s had plenty of non-foil Commander printings plus the original foil and A25 foil, but they’re all the same art and the MA foils should outclass them all.
I think the global art versions at $5 are a better pickup than the Japanese arts at $20, and should be set to crest $10 pretty soon and continue up towards $15-20 not long after that. CardKingdom are already paying $4.50 cash/$5.85 credit on the global art foils, which should be a very strong sign that these are going to play out well, and could be a good buylist option down the line when you’re looking to out your copies.
David Sharman (@accidentprune on Twitter) has been playing Magic since 2013, dabbling in almost all formats but with a main focus on Modern, EDH and Pioneer. Based in the UK and a new writer for MTGPrice in 2020, he’s an active MTG finance speculator specialising in cross-border arbitrage.
I like planning ahead, and figuring out what I can do ahead of time. Sometime I have to move fast on things, like Zombies getting a whole deck of goodies during the Werewolf set. We can plan ahead, though, and make some plans with regard to Neon Kamigawa.
I’m going to look at the themes that we got in Original Kamigawa, see what we can glean from a return to that theme, and dive in.
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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.
That’s right, readers, Britney Spears has been busted loose from her oppressive conservatorship, proving to the 1.3 million Americans in such arrangements that escape is possible if you have worldwide fame, millions of dollars and tons of public support, you can be free of your conservatorship after a 13 year legal battle. You know what else has busted loose? All of these specs! What, you needed a better segue than that? The good stuff is below the fold.
Still above the fold, though, is the slug of the hour. Toxril is the second-most-built new Crimson Vow commander and I think that’s pretty significant. I’d love to do #1 but considering that’s Runo and we did that last week, let’s move on, shall we?
This card is redefining “Group Slug” by taking down all of their creatures. However, Toxril offers 0 synergy with -1/-1 counters strategies from the past, making it the perfect mix of familiar gameplay and new cards. If we can’t use Blowfly Infestation or Nest of Scarabs as effectively, which cards take their place on the top of the high synergy list? The answer may surprise you. Also, it may not. I have no idea what surprises people these days.
There is some good stuff here. It’s a nice mix of cards that have been used before in decks that care about proliferation and some novel tech. Let’s look at the novel stuff because it likely has the most room to grow.
Having already flirted with a $4 price tag, Hunted Phantasm is nicely posed to do some work as a result of Toxril. It’s a shoo-in inclusion in the deck, copies are concentrated in the hands of dealers a bit since it spiked last year (though the market is nowhere near as efficient at that as it used to be) and the same market forces that kept copies out of the hands of dealers are keeping them off of TCG Player meaning it could pop overnight. There are 145 listings on TCG Player for around $2, which sucks, but we could see some real gains if that wall is surmounted. There are fewer listings on other sites, but no one notices if other sites, even Card Kingdom, sell out of TCG Player still has a grip of them, even if it’s just damaged and foreign language copies. I like this at $1.50 if it can get to $4 again, but it doesn’t seem like people are as aware of this as they are “obvious” cards.
If there might be too many copies on TCG Player, there are certainly too many copies of Clackbridge Troll. I like the extended art more, but there is just so much volume and no demand from anywhere else. Not all of these specs are equal – look at Tombstone Stairwell and how much it went up because it’s a 20th century Reserved List card. A Throne non-mythic just can’t be expected to behave the same way.
If you like lower supply, foils of Polymorphist’s Jest are selling out everywhere. It’s a goofy card with no demand anywhere else and the price has done some very goofy things in the past, but it seems to be moving, based on Toxril or not.
Toxril was merely the first time anyone paid attention to Phantasm, but Horror has been out here doing work quietly for years. We are seeing a sharp price uptick – lower supply, higher ceiling and more demand elsewhere could push Horror up and make it an even better spec than Phantasm. With only 53 listings, this seems juicier. So why did I get to it later that Phantasm? Well, this isn’t a High Synergy card because it’s played elsewhere. High Synergy cards take effort and demand to get going, but pop hard because they go from no demand to no supply and that really upends everyone’s price expectations. Cards played elsewhere are less dependent on a huge increase predicated on a new deck but are less likely to be a “bust” because they have support in other areas. I like both of these as specs, but the risk profile is very different for each.
Where does a card like this end up? Well, let’s try and extrapolate. Here is what happened to a card from the same set that has 3 times as many copies out there.
This was based on expected demand from Yurlok. Did Yurlok get played?
Kinda? Here is its rank in its set.
If Toxril continues as it is, it could be in about 1.5 times as many decks relative to Yurlok in Crimson Vow. Will we see more total decks from Vow than from Commander Legends? Doubtful, but we are comparing a rare to an Uncommon that maintained its value despite not seeing play outside of this one deck, basically. Can Infernal Genesis break a dollar? It’s not as good as Citadel, not as obvious, not as played. All that said, it’s old and I just told people about it. I think a price correction is likely, but I assume everyone builds with the same information as I do.
Toxril doesn’t really synergize great with cards like Blowfly Infestation, but cards like Contagion Engine are still solid, and will always be solid.
With some help from The List and from everyone in the world having a Atraxa list and moving on, the price of Contagion Engine is now currently between its historic low and its historic high. The additional copies aren’t ideal, but they haven’t slowed down other promising cards. Demand is demand and Contagion Engine is almost surely a buy under $10, even for The List copies. If Toxril doesn’t do it, something else will, and the The List reprinting reduces its reprint risk, though it doesn’t eliminate it.
There are a lot of other great Toxril cards I may have missed – don’t feel intimidated by me not mentioning a card. Hit me up in the comments or, if you’re a Pro Trader, in Discord. Let’s talk through your thought process. That does it for me, readers. Until next time!
MAGIC: THE GATHERING FINANCE ARTICLES AND COMMUNITY