menu

Free: MTGO Standard and Extended Buy Lists

Are you a Quiet Speculation member?

If not, now is a perfect time to join up! Our powerful tools, breaking-news analysis, and exclusive Discord channel will make sure you stay up to date and ahead of the curve.

To see the Insider version of this article please click here.

This week weā€™re going to take a look at some of the MTGO pricing that is floating around out there. Iā€™ve imported the pricing from every site that I could find and produce usable data from. There are surprisingly few posted price lists online for MTGO. For the data I was able to locate and use Iā€™d like to thank Supernovabots, Magic Traders, Sharpbot, and Foggy. I was unable to pull down the data from CardHoarder, MTGO Academy, and MTGO Library. Some of those listed above that I was able to capture donā€™t have Buy Lists or Price Lists online, or in one case generates all their pricing figures as pictures instead of text. I may be able to do more in the future when Iā€™m running something more sophisticated than Excel, but for now this is what I could get. Some of the online listings donā€™t allow browsing and you have to search for cards one at a time. If you have a favorite that isnā€™t listed here, please let me know and I will try to add it.

These spread sheets are all templated off of those designed for paper Magic so they may look a bit familiar. Keep in mind that like the other lists I work with, they will continue to get updated as time goes on, so you can always check back in later to this same article to see what might have changed.

First up, we have our Top 60 list. You may also notice that I have many of the columns figures going out to three digits after the decimal. This isnā€™t really nessesary for some of the charts, but some of the bots list prices at less than a cent, and this is a tradeoff so that my sheet doesnā€™t just round them to $0.00.

[iframe https://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=0AukC5EWiTvOpdEJ2Znp1cUZVVG4xMENZZ3ZxNXlNN3c&hl=en&single=true&gid=9&output=html&widget=false 567px 600px]

Just like in the world of offline MTG Jace, the Mind Sculptor is still sculpting the minds of players into the top spot for Standard and Extended. Next in line for the most valuable cards being bot bought are Vengevine, Primeval Titan, and Lotus Cobra. It takes five cards down the list before we hit our first Extended card Figure of Destiny. Itā€™s about this time that we start to see the bigger differences between online and offline. A paper Figure of Destiny goes for under $9, but online itā€™s more than double. I would imagine that is a scarcity issue more than its relative worth. If anyone can point me toward MTGO historical population and sales figures we might be able to get a reason being such a swing. Iā€™m thinking that if a set is relatively unpopular online for some reason we end up with a very different economy then we do IRL. For physical cards the markert is going to at least get itā€™s initial print run, no matter how popular it isā€¦ Online though only gets how many are purchased, one for one, so there would be fewer cards out there and available if it suddenly ā€œgot goodā€ later on. Figure of Destiny was always good, but perhaps that was realized too late? Going on down the list we start to get into more Extended cards like Bitterblossom and Mutavault, the Fae staples. I did a double take, and rechecked my numbers when i saw that Superovabots was buying and selling Twilight Mire for over $20. There also seems to be a large disparity in what the bots are selling for and some of the deals going through in eBay. There isnā€™t much data there, but weā€™ll look at it more later on in this article.

[iframe https://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=0AukC5EWiTvOpdFcwSnp6bUxTRFVTdkJ6cUdoNHRNb1E&hl=en&single=true&gid=3&output=html&widget=false 567px 600px]

[iframe https://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=0AukC5EWiTvOpdEJ2Znp1cUZVVG4xMENZZ3ZxNXlNN3c&hl=en&single=true&gid=3&output=html&widget=false 567px 600px]

This is only a guess since I donā€™t operate a bot myself, but the 24 hour nature of Magic Online must play into the slim margins on these cards. With the top end cards show margins as small as 6% there must also be a very large number of Commons and Uncommons being played to make this a viable system for any serious bot owner. I could also image that a series of market driven price cuts just got away from the big providers and ended up being the norm. Other than changes to the order of the cards on the Standard list above, itā€™s only two cards different from the paper version (Online has Eldrazi Monument and Avenger of Zendikar, where offline has Frost Titan and Abyssal Persecutor). The Extended lists share six of the same cards and the values are wildly different. I may have to focus in on that a bit more in another article. On to our MTGO Womby lists.

[iframe https://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=0AukC5EWiTvOpdEJ2Znp1cUZVVG4xMENZZ3ZxNXlNN3c&hl=en&single=true&gid=11&output=html&widget=false 567px 600px]

[iframe https://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=0AukC5EWiTvOpdEJ2Znp1cUZVVG4xMENZZ3ZxNXlNN3c&hl=en&single=true&gid=13&output=html&widget=false 567px 600px]

I have a bit of a caveat on these lists. The eBay community for MTGO cards is nowhere close to as large as it is for the cardboard croud. For our purposes this means that there are far fewer sales to be able to track and that has some adverse effects on our data. Normally, in order to eliminate false positives, I establish a minimum threshold number of transactions. The data that comes from MagicTraders doesnā€™t filter out completed but unpurchased sales, so if someone puts up a sale for a random Uncommon at 100 times the price, realizes the mistake and deletes the auction, it gets counted as a sale. Generally, if i card has fewer than say, 10 sales in a month I donā€™t count it. This is not something I can do with the MTGO list because nearly all the cards have only a single monthly transaction. So if something looks wrong here, it might be one of these false positive sales.

This may in fact be the case with the Time Warp that has a paper price of $7, and MTGO price of about $3 and an eBay price of about $1. If you can grab MTGO Time Warps for $1 on eBay and sell them to randombot for almost $3ā€¦ more power to you! Take a look at the other items on this list where you might be able to rake in the tickets and pay for that Insider Subscription youā€™ve had your heart set on (or already purchased!)

The second list shows you similar data but itā€™s bots vs. bots. In the case of the number one slot (at the time of writing) Jenara, Asura of War, itā€™s certinaly some kind of mistake that they are selling the card for so much less than they are buying them for. I would not in fact advocate taking advantage of their clerical error since those kinds of things are a drain on the whole community and kindness tends to be self-rewarding, but there are going to be some legitimate times that one bot will need cards and pay more for them than others are selling them for. If any bot owners are reading this, make sure to get your sales online so that I can track these points of viable cross selling! For the rest of you guys, gobble ā€˜em up!

[iframe https://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=0AukC5EWiTvOpdFcwSnp6bUxTRFVTdkJ6cUdoNHRNb1E&hl=en&single=true&gid=5&output=html&widget=false 567px 600px]

[iframe https://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=0AukC5EWiTvOpdEJ2Znp1cUZVVG4xMENZZ3ZxNXlNN3c&hl=en&single=true&gid=5&output=html&widget=false 567px 600px]

Here we have the full list of MTGO Standard and Extended Rares in alpha order by set. If you want to look something up, this is the place.

[iframe https://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=0AukC5EWiTvOpdEJ2Znp1cUZVVG4xMENZZ3ZxNXlNN3c&hl=en&single=true&gid=14&output=html&widget=false 567px 600px]

[iframe https://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=0AukC5EWiTvOpdEJ2Znp1cUZVVG4xMENZZ3ZxNXlNN3c&hl=en&single=true&gid=15&output=html&widget=false 567px 600px]

Once more we have some Womby Lists, eBay and Stores. These are a lot more Rares than Mythics in Standard and Mythic so there are more options to make some margins. Take a look and hunt down the bots to grab what you can.

[iframe https://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=0AukC5EWiTvOpdFcwSnp6bUxTRFVTdkJ6cUdoNHRNb1E&hl=en&single=true&gid=7&output=html&widget=false 567px 600px]

[iframe https://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=0AukC5EWiTvOpdEJ2Znp1cUZVVG4xMENZZ3ZxNXlNN3c&hl=en&single=true&gid=7&output=html&widget=false 567px 600px]

Above are the complete MTGO Uncommon lists.

[iframe https://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=0AukC5EWiTvOpdEJ2Znp1cUZVVG4xMENZZ3ZxNXlNN3c&hl=en&single=true&gid=17&output=html&widget=false 567px 600px]

[iframe https://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=0AukC5EWiTvOpdEJ2Znp1cUZVVG4xMENZZ3ZxNXlNN3c&hl=en&single=true&gid=18&output=html&widget=false 567px 600px]

Much like in corporeal Magic there arenā€™t many opportunities for Uncommons. The best suggestion I have is to try and get deals on the higher value ones and trade them inā€¦ this might be more tedious then itā€™s worth though.

Thatā€™s all I have for this week. If you guys have anything in mind that you'd like to see or a different way to arrange the data, let me know.

Magic Analyist
Chris McNutt
Level 1 Judge
@fatecreatr on Twitter

Chris McNutt

Born in Seattle, Washington, Chris McNutt has been playing and collecting Magic: The Gathering since Unlimited Edition. As an active player, tournament organizer and judge he regularly scrubs out of Pro Tour Qualifiers but inexplicably cleans up at the local draft tables. When not net decking Chris is either busy working as an Information Technology Sales Rep or spending time with his family. Other non-magical pastimes include playing guitar and an unhealthy number of video games. Cursed with an undying love of generating spreadsheets purely for Ć¢ā‚¬Å“funĆ¢ā‚¬Ā, heĆ¢ā‚¬ā„¢ll be crunching the numbers each week in order to serve up delicious data burritos to the salivating, hungry readers of Quiet Speculation.

View More By Chris McNutt

Posted in Finance, Free, Free FinanceTagged , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Have you joined the Quiet Speculation Discord?

If you haven't, you're leaving value on the table! Join our community of experts, enthusiasts, entertainers, and educators and enjoy exclusive podcasts, questions asked and answered, trades, sales, and everything else Discord has to offer.

Want to create content with Quiet Speculation?

All you need to succeed is a passion for Magic: The Gathering, and the ability to write coherently. Share your knowledge of MTG and how you leverage it to win games, get value from your cards ā€“ or even turn a profit.

One thought on “Free: MTGO Standard and Extended Buy Lists

Join the conversation

Want Prices?

Browse thousands of prices with the first and most comprehensive MTG Finance tool around.


Trader Tools lists both buylist and retail prices for every MTG card, going back a decade.

Quiet Speculation