We’re divvying up the spoiler to make sure we give you a wide variety of opinions about the cards in the last core set for Magic. We all have different opinion,s but we are all experienced Magic financiers and we all strive for excellence. I was assigned “artifacts, multicolors spells, and EDH cards.” Anyway, here’s all the green cards.
Tag Archives: Mtg
Casual Gains #1: Evaluate
By: Houston Whitehead
One evening, after work, I received a text saying, “They’re here. Want to come over?” It was from my future roommate letting me know his dad’s Magic cards from California had arrived. All he told me about was, “They’re f*%&ing old.” That’s more than enough to get me excited to go digging for buried treasure. After picking through the collection I found a few competitive gems, like both Sword of Light and Shadow and Sword of Fire and Ice, but most of the value settles in multiple playsets of Glimpse the Unthinkable and Doubling Season. Keep in mind this was 2013 so Doubling Season was $30+ and Glimpse the Unthinkable was $25 (lower than it is currently).
Stacks of other “casual” cards were quickly turning this collection from hundreds to thousands in less than a half an hour. After we finished he said, “I bet you need a lot of this stuff, don’t you.” I replied, “To be honest, just the two swords.” After a confused expression was thrown my way I tried to explain the best I could. “Card value doesn’t always reflect the tournament playability of a card. Sometimes less competitive formats can have just as much demand.“ I talked more about the limited amount of MTG financial knowledge I had and explained the effects of reprints (or lack of), bannings, unbannings, and the varying stability of different formats. It sounds impressive when I list it like that but I promise it wasn’t. I still had a lot to learn as well.
I didn’t give casual card value anymore thought until I started working at my LGS. Valuable Commander cards and casual cards many times overlap, but the growth of Commander was starting to apply more pressure on our inventory. I made or filled up all the $1, $2, and $3 binders with these styles of cards and had a hard time keeping a few cards in stock. I went even deeper by placing cards like Dream Twist in the case for .50 next to Traumatize and Mind Funeral. This experiment also brought some success.
Themes
Last week I thought about what qualifies a casual card. The closest place to find kitchen table decklists is TappedOut but we don’t have a place to see how those players deckbuild. It’s doubtful they have trends and meta changes cause every kitchen table is different. Most of the time you play with what you opened in packs and buy a few more to make it a little sweeter. I wanted to find a way to find those extra cards. Single sales is probably the best way to determine but I don’t have access to online retailer’s sales statistics. Closest thing I thought of was buylists. When I was at GP Nashville I saw “Quicksilver Amulet” for $3 on a buylist. I had a bunch in a box at home but never thought adding them to my backpack for the day would make me money.
Any financier understands the value of a buylist but I doubt that will unlock all the casual desirable since each inventory varies by retailer. So, I attempted to breakdown each theme that qualifies a potential gainer inside the casual market.
*Keep in mind these strategies can overlap but are predominantly satisfy one type of theme*
Committed Themes – Cards that are good at one thing and help achieve a basic/simple goal. These decks are built with cards that revolve around this commitment.
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Lifegain – Gain life until to you make a 10 min. game into a 5 hour game.
- Mill – Forcing your library into your graveyard until you can’t draw a card.
- Burn – Cheap spells that deal damage
- Douchbaggary – Strategies that deny your opponent the ability to play Magic.
- Land Destruction – You can figure this one out.
- All Counters – Counter everything you play without having a game plan to actually win the game.
- Over Taxing – Effects, permanents, or creatures that make casting spells cost an additional amount of mana or require paying mana to allow your creatures to attack.
Synergistic Themes – Cards that require assistance from other cards to achieve a more complex goal.
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Tribal – Any card that cares about a creature type. Goblins, merfolk, and elves, Lorwyn Block, slivers, wizards, rebels, etc. Usually involve “lords” that grant abilities or extra power and toughness while they are on the battlefield.
- Combo – Usually three card infinite combos or combos that do creative but not game-winning things. Ex: Soul’s Attendant + Leonin Relic-Warder + Phyrexian Metamorph = Infinite Life
- Tokens – Creating a wide token army combined with equipment or enchantments with “lord” effects.
- Alternative Win Con – Winning without reducing your opponents life total or milling until they cannot raw cards. Ex: Helix Pinnacle
- Counters (the non-blue kind) – Placing a large amount of +1/+1 counters on your creatures or -1/-1 counters on your opponents creatures. Also includes effects to increase the amount of counters or give abilities to creatures with counters on them. Ex: Doubling Season
Identifying the most popular archetypes was my first step in identifying the casual cards with the most gain potential. Desired commons and uncommons can hold foil value like the Foil Invasion Heroes’ Reunion ($2.50) or Foil Hedron Crab ($8). These are prices an everyday player or store might not be aware of. Sadly, gaining value on casual cards takes patience but at least they’re the easiest to pick up. Adding potential casual cards to your mental list of cards to pick from collections, might surprise your wallet later. I actually have a thousand count box to place these investments in. My Non-Standard binder isn’t shy of casuals like Isochron Scepter and Browbeat either. I practice what I preach.
In Casual Gains #2: Identify, I’ll talk more about specific cards and prices inside each theme.
As always thanks for reading
Financial Five: Modern Masters 2015
By: Houston Whitehead
Though the majority of the MTG community seems to be in an uproar about the amount of value placed in Modern Masters 2015, profit can still be accumulated. As with many sets, cracking cardboard lottery tickets to push out those last few proxies in your Modern deck is not a road worth traveling. In fact, I wouldn’t take a road at all. I want to sit in a lawn chair off the beaten path with sunscreen on my nose and wait for the tidal wave of Modern Masters 2015 singles to wreck the complacent prices that have become accepted as part of a Modern player’s life.
The Twist
Normally, a Financial Five article will cover five new cards from an upcoming release I deem to possess profitable potential. Since Modern Masters 2015 contains 100% reprints, we already know many of the roles it plays or decks lists play four copies.
We all know…
…reprints bring prices down (unless you’re Tarmogoyf).
…format staple prices will recover over time (proven by the first Modern Masters).
…Modern will never be as cheap as you want it to be.
So this time on Financial Five, we’re going to discuss five cards worth picking up at the bottom of their financial decent that also have the most potential to recover over time.
Cryptic Command (TCG Mid $41)
From four copies in the UWR Control deck down to a double copy in Splinter Twin variants, it’s the Swiss army knife every blue player loves and everyone else hates. The top shelf $60 price tag was simply out of reach for anyone wanting to dip their toes into Modern with being forced to play the handful of budget aggro decks. During the early months of 2014 (six months after the Modern Master release) Cryptic sat at an understandable $25. I think the 2015 print will bring it back to that desirable price and slowly start to creep back up as early as the Origins release. Pick up $25 or under.
Karn Liberated (TCG Mid $36)
Starting at $50, Karn has already taken a couple steps down but I don’t think he’s done yet. Though he honestly only sees competitive play in TRON variants, I think Commander players will have a large influence on recovering his price. Though the recovery will be slower than Modern staples, like Cryptic Command or Noble Hierarch, I think he will land $25 or under and creep up in the long run. Pick up $25 or under.
Splinter Twin (TCG Mid $21)
Love it, hate it, or still want it banned, we have to respect the power of Splinter Twin. Over the last year this card alone has spawned so many variants you’d have to go to college to count that high. It’s the definition of a format staple and a worthy reprint. Twin’s price wasn’t out of control yet but was clearly teetering on the edge. I expect the bottom price to land around $10 and stay close to it for the next year. Pick up $10 or under.
Spellskite (TCG Mid $21)
This little 0/4 has been the chief of Splinter Twin’s security detail for close to three years. It’s won over a slot in Modern and Legacy Infect lists and, more importantly, can take a bolt. Though Spellskite’s price has been increasing faster than Meandering Towershell, I still feel a $10 price tag should be the lowest it will go before heading back up. Pick up $25 $10 or under and your future sideboards will thank you.
Noble Hierarch (TCG Mid $41)
Let’s be honest, this price was getting WAY out of hand. I doubt Modern Masters 2015 will drop Noble low enough to satisfy every Modern player, but she sees too much competitive play to fall into a $10 range. I honestly feel $30 will be a reasonable price to go in at. You could get greedy and wait for a lower bottom but it won’t take long for the price to ascend quickly after hitting the bottom. Its existence in Infect, Zoo, and a variety of Junk (Abzan) decks will welcome all those looking to investing in Modern therefore keeping her demand high. If supply can’t keep up with all the new Modern players she might be back at $50 before you know it. Pick up $30 or under.
Wrap Up
I’m excited for the Modern Masters 2015 Limited format but don’t feel popping open $10 lottery tickets have enough to reward me financially. I think attacking trade binders and single cases is the best way to unlock those decks you have been wanting to pilot. I’m still thankful for the Modern Masters series Wizards of the Coast is printing though. Las Vegas weekend is going to be one for the record books.
If you’re attending Grand Prix Las Vegas and want to meet, hit me up on Twitter.
As always thanks for reading
Financial Leftovers: Dragons of Tarkir
Usually I write a column called Financial Five on Brainstorm Brewery at each set release. This column highlights my top five cards worth speculating on in the new Standard environment. With MTGPrice now sponsoring BSB, I reached out and was glad to be asked to join this team of knowledgeable MTG finance juggernauts.
With so much going on, my Dragons of Tarkir (DTK) article was caught in limbo during the website transition and couldn’t post until after Pro Tour Dragons of Tarkir.
I still see value in my original FF: DTK article and want to find a way to relay that experience to you. The below points aren’t me saying, “I could have told you where ‘X’s’ price was going to land.” Rather, I’m revisiting some of the things I originally thought to help us all understand price changes from a set’s prerelease to after the Pro Tour. I learn something about finance every time a new set comes out. (And for those who dislike staring at graphs, this is a price fluctuation overview of DTK.)
Original Financial Five: DTK
The prices cited below are release-day prices. Here’s what I said about the cards I called:
- Blood-Chin Fanatic – $2 or less – Post Theros rotation prediction. Warriors have a lot of playable choices with the exit of Drown in Sorrow and Anger of the Gods.
- Sidisi, Undead Vizier – $4 – Finding a creature to extort is not a problem in this metagame. Sidisi helps you break midrange mirrors and blocks well.
- Surrak, the Hunt Caller – $4.50 – The Polukranos replacement we needed for this metagame. Perfect for Abzan Aggro and Green Devotion decks.
- Stratus Dancer – $2 or less – This is an extra counter in the control mirror that pressures your opponent’s life total. It has potential in a R/U Dragons Tempo deck.
- Hidden Dragonslayer – $1 – This is undervalued due to the expectation of only fitting in warriors decks, but remove the creature type and it’s removal against any opponent that plays stabilizing creatures on turn four or five.
Honorable Mentions
- Icefall Regent – $2 or less – I was so close to switching this with Hidden Dragonslayer, but ultimately felt it didn’t have as much room to move up.
- Den Protector – $2 – I wanted to get behind this card, but thought Tasigur was clearly better card advantage. Black and green are almost always together in today’s Standard. Clearly, I was wrong. Guess I should know more synergistic green uncommon enchantments from Journey to Nyx.
DTK That I Missed
- Dragonlord Atarka – Holy cow! This is a great example of how MTG finance works with a mythic that gets played as a four-of at the Pro Tour.
- Dragonlord Silumgar – I remember wanting to like him but never thought the removal-heavy nature of Standard would allow him to make waves (or flaps in his case, I guess). The amount of board control in the U/B Dragon deck converted even the more serious skeptics, though.
Price Movements & Updates
- Sidisi, Undead Vizier and Surrak, Hunt Caller both moved up in advance of the Pro Tour due to lack of available product and in response to the first streamed event with DTK (a Star City Games Open, I might add).
- Hidden Dragonslayer, Blood-Chin Fanatic, and Stratus Dancer stayed the same.
- Den Protector and Icefall Regent went from $2 to $5 for reasons different than I had originally mentioned.
- Surrak, Hunt Caller & Sidisi, Undead Vizier went back down to around $4.50 each.
Financial Opportunities Left in DTK
- The whole undercosted megamorph cycle (except for Silumgar Assassin) is powerful enough to see future Standard format play.
- Hidden Dragonslayer and Blood-Chin Fanatic are still safe pickup targets due to post rotation speculations (at $2 or less).
- If anything bumps Atarka off her pedestal, look for a small Hornet Queen or Genesis Hydra price increase. Being rares, they won’t see a similar spike to the Dragonlord, but Hornet Queen is the only one of the two that has another printing. They both have a chance to hit $5 again.
- Sarkhan Unbroken still has some time to drop, but I think $10 or less is a good place to get in at. The dual lands from the next block will hold a lot of weight in determining whether he is worthwhile. History shows Wizards like to switch back and forth between mono- or two-colored Standard and multicolored Standard. Since DTK didnt have rare duals, tri lands, or gain lands, I suspect the Theros rotation will be a multicolor format. We know that Battle for Zendikar will encourage printing unique rare lands (such as enemy fetches or Valakut-style lands) and land-mechanic synergies (like landfall). I think Sarkhan keeps a lot of potential playablilty pre-Khans/Fate Reforged rotation.
Am I thinking too far ahead? Maybe. As you’ll find out in my next article, I take some unique or unconventional approaches to trading and finance. It pays to be prepared, though.
Wrap Up
I understand this article wasn’t chock-full of financial recommendations, but I do hope it can give you a little insight on how prices behave from a set’s prerelease to after the Pro Tour.
Let my correct predictions excite you for future Financial Five articles and let my screw-ups give you an excuse to send me a tweet saying, “How did you miss that?!?!”
As always, thanks for reading.