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Your Free Dragon’s Maze Price Sheet for the Prereleases This Weekend (and the Trader Tools beta)

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Hello and welcome! We've got another round of those handy cheat-sheets to print out for the prerelease this weekend. I've had people request both alphabetized ones and price-ranked ones, so I went ahead and made two versions. Pick the one you like more or print both of them out. It looks like there aren't many expensive cards in this set, but bear in mind that it's a smaller one - only 166 cards.

The set's price has to be at least a certain minimum (and we internally put that at about $140). MTGO Redeemers make the markets for paper cards in some ways. The previous two sets had the shocklands to keep prices down across the board (and while DGM has them in the land slot, we can't quite count on that for pricing the set). I see Voice of Resurgence staying at $20 or jumping up to $40 if it's played. The set needs a few banner cards to keep prices up for redeemers. In other words, if you don't have a lot of $10 cards around, you'll have some $40 cards instead.

Have a great time at your prerelease this weekend, and happy trading! There are a lot of newer and inexperienced players at prereleases, so be a Good Guy and help them get good trades. What's good for your store is good for you, too.

DGM Cheat Sheet: Price-Ordered / Alphabetized

NEW:  Trader Tools 2 [beta]

By now you've probably used our Trader Tools, located at MTG.GG.  It's a great piece of software that's saved many hours and earned our members tends of thousands of extra value.  We're always trying to add more value to the Insider package, making sure our subscribers are always getting the most for their money.

Though it's not quite ready for the prime-time yet, we just had to  release it in time for the pre-release.   There are probably bugs, and there are still a load of features and tweaks that we will continue to make, but we thought it would be better to give our members access as soon as we felt the site could support it.  Just like the original TT, you can still use this software without being an Insider member, but you'll miss out on the real powerhouse features.

TT2 will be the most advanced Magic card price tool you've ever used.  And it's only getting better.    Check it out now.

Insider members get access to:

  • Full set buylists, so you can see what every card in a Magic set buylists for
  • Your own custom lists so you can track inventory, decks, want-lists and more.
  • A one-page portal to our Insider chatroom, articles,  and forums and messaging.
  • A blazingly fast search that will show you prices before you've finished even typing. It's seriously cool.

If you're not an Insider, you can still look up any card in Magic and see its median selling price in stores, what the highest buy price is, and what the difference between the two numbers is ("the spread").

It's still in Beta testing. We've added a "bug report" feature, so blow that thing up with your comments. We couldn't hold off on getting this out any later because we wanted everyone to have it for DGM Prerelease weekend. It's not a finished product but it's still got insane functionality to it. I love being able to save a list of all my bulk rares and watch the list change in value over time. Pretty cool stuff!

The mtg.gg shortlink still goes to the stable Trader Tools you're used to. We'll move it to the new version when we've squashed some more bugs.

Douglas Linn

Doug Linn has been playing Magic since 1996 and has had a keen interest in Legacy and Modern. By keeping up closely with emerging trends in the field, Doug is able to predict what cards to buy and when to sell them for a substantial profit. Since the Eternal market follows a routine boom-bust cycle, the time to buy and sell short-term speculative investments is often a narrow window. Because Eternal cards often spike in value once people know why they are good, it is essential for a trader to be connected to the format to get great buys before anyone else. Outside of Magic, Doug is an attorney in the state of Ohio.  Doug is a founding member of Quiet Speculation, and brings with him a tremendous amount of business savvy.

View More By Douglas Linn

Posted in Dragon's Maze, FreeTagged , ,

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13 thoughts on “Your Free Dragon’s Maze Price Sheet for the Prereleases This Weekend (and the Trader Tools beta)

  1. I don’t really understand this concept– can you elaborate? “MTGO Redeemers make the markets for paper cards in some ways. The previous two sets had the shocklands to keep prices down across the board (and while DGM has them in the land slot, we can’t quite count on that for pricing the set)….The set needs a few banner cards to keep prices up for redeemers. In other words, if you don’t have a lot of $10 cards around, you’ll have some $40 cards instead.”

  2. I probably should have just spent an article explaining that on its own : )

    I\’ve been noting a trend that most sets are about the same price to buy when you can redeem them online. They\’re between $130-150. The combined total of all of the cards in a set should not exceed that roughly $140 amount, since otherwise the market will just correct – crack sealed sets – and fix the prices again. And it mostly does that.

    $140 is kind of a spooky number with large sets. In Magical Land, you must open a minimum of 68 packs to get a full set of rares and mythics in a large set like GTC, if you open a different one with each pack. Wholesale packs are $2.10. 68 packs x $2.10 = $140, which was the average price for GTC and RTR when I looked into this about a month ago. I was doing a lot of research but then the redemption fees went up a lot and it chilled my work. I wanted to let the market settle out more.

    1. Wow, actually, it’s even better than at first glance. Sorted by the store??? This would have saved me literally days when I was going through and doing my big sell-off a couple months ago. If it were only possible to get coolstuffinc and channelfireball on there…

      1. Okay, actually, there are some flaws. It doesn’t seem to distinguish between foils and non-foils, is the primary one. That’s a pretty big problem.

        1. Agreed, and it\’s on the bugs list, too. I noticed that last night. I don\’t want to hide behind \”beta\” too much but it\’s only been alive for about 4 hrs 🙂

  3. Being able to see foil and non foil data at the same time is a huge plus, why not just put them next to each other with their own, clear heading? Also, black text on navy is nigh-unreadable.

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