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High Stakes MTGO – Feb 21st to Feb 27th

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Welcome back for another week of High Stakes MTGO!

This past week was fairly busy, with no less than a dozen positions moving in or out of my account. The Magic Origins full sets I sold brought an influx of more than 3000 tix in only few days. Having 3000 additional tix almost from one day to another won't really change my overall strategy, but I surely need to adapt a tiny bit to a growing bankroll.

When you're not constrained on tix you might think there's less need to sell positions on a rising trend. If you already have a comfortable pool of tix available for any opportunity, why not let a trend ride a little bit longer? While this line of reasoning may be true in several instances I think you have to treat all your positions with the same respect in all bankroll circumstances, almost independently of the number of tix you currently have in your bankroll.

If it's objectively a good time to sell a position or if that position has reached your goals (duration or value) then you should probably sell it, even if it is to add 200 tix on the top of 10,000 other tix while there are no buying opportunities around. You never really know when news such as the launch of Legacy Leagues will hit, suddenly creating dozens of buying opportunities at once. The position you decided to wait on may cycle down and it may take another four months to cycle back up, while you miss out on other opportunities in the meantime.

At the beginning of this series I was telling you that my standard limit when buying a new position was around 200 tix. With a growing account and now a lot of tix available, I decided to increase that limit to 300-350 tix whenever possible.

Here is the snapshot of the account as of last Saturday.

Buys This Week

SS

One of the many Modern staples that didn't survive the arrival of the Eldrazis. But also one of the many most likely to rebound when the ban hammer hits the Eldrazi decks in April.

Scapeshift had been floating in the 25-27 tix price range for more than two weeks. With a potential above 40 tix and Morningtide flashback drafts to be scheduled sometimes later this Summer, I'm taking a position now with the next B&R list announcement as my time target.

CC

The reasoning for the blue command is the same as for Scapeshift. 5 to 6 tix has been the historical floor of Cryptic Command since the inception of Modern. So with potentially another major change in the Modern metagame soon and with Lorwyn flashback drafts being several months away, I decided to reload a few playsets of this command.

TtB

This is my first target from the Kamigawa block flashback drafts. The ban of Splinter Twin and Summer Bloom credited this red instant a value of 20 tix before the Eldrazis ruined everything.

9 to 10 tix was a decent price in my opinion to stock up on these and I won't hesitate to grab more copies if its price returns below 10 tix during the week we have left of Kamigawa block flashback drafts.

KgS

Another victim of collateral damage from the Twin ban that hasn't found a home in a Modern metagame tyrannized by the Eldrazis. After a deep dive from almost 50 tix down to 13 tix, Keranos's price was looking for a floor to rebound.

Supplies of this god are not very high and when I saw the price slightly on the rise I decided to pull the trigger for 22 copies. Hopefully this guy will be on the long list of Modern cards to make a comeback once the next B&R list announcement lowers the power of Eldrazi decks.

BFZ4

This past Saturday the price of BFZ full sets took a slight hit down to 63 tix. This may not be momentary, but since I was planing on buying more BFZ full sets if the prices allows it I added four more playsets at 63.49 tix each. I'm ready to stock up to 50 sets if the price keeps dropping.

Sales This Week

Prices of these two ORI painlands were in my selling range this week and I kept selling copies of Caves while opening my selling account with the Reefs. Still a lot more to go...

MO

This was my target selling price so no hesitation here. 44% profit on a full set spec is fully satisfying for me. I could have made the same move four months earlier, though, when the value of an ORI full set was about the same last October. At least it reached that point again, thanks to Jace, Vryn's Prodigy now orbiting above 90 Tix.

Another bulk spec that hits the mark. Hyped by budget Goblin decks posting 5-0 during Modern leagues, Legion Loyalist spiked to 2 tix a little more than a week ago. The perfect storm to sell my stock of more than 150 gobs.

It seems I may have sold my Bridges a bit too early but at that time they were already slightly above my initial selling price target of 30 tix. Following what I said in the intro of this article I sold my 8th Edition Ensnaring Bridge.

This spec is the first coming from the Modern flashback draft series and represents the perfect example of what I'd like to see from the opportunities created by these flashback drafts---70% profit in 7 weeks. However, let's be frank here, this type of return may not happen often.

A first wave of sales from the next sets to rotate out of Standard in April. By any metric these represent failed investments. Tasigur and Warden should have been sold a while ago. These are yet more reminders that it's advisable to sell when a price spike occurs in Standard, as it may never happen again.

For Hardened Scales, I ironically decided to wake up early on Saturday morning to proceed to a wave of sales. Unfortunately I didn't keep myself updated, only to realize a few hours later that Scales is part of a new Standard deck that made some noise this past weekend at GP Houston.

When I bough Petrified Field I was aiming at moderate returns and a 10 tix selling price. Mission complete here with an average selling price of 11.58 tix. It will be someone else's job to see if these can go higher.

On My Radar

The BFZ full sets dipped a little bit this past weekend and I bought four more copies of them. BFZ is still drafted and prices might keep sliding in the following weeks. How long and by how much is the thousand-dollar question. My budget for BFZ full sets is for about 50 sets, so I'll keep an eye on prices and will keep buying a few sets here and there if the trend is on the lose.

Still with BFZ, singles are also targets to consider. Nothing but Gideon, Ally of Zendikar really sticks out for now. However this set has two cycles of lands with good potential (as with almost every land cycle) and also decent mythics that may rise when Standard rotates.

There are also a few cards such as Drana, Liberator of Malakir that may have good synergy with the potential vampire tribe in Shadows over Innistrad. It may still be too early to fully commit to any single, but Drana for instance has been oscillating between 3 and 4 tix since the release of BFZ.

Could it go below 3 tix before April? And does this card really needs vampires spoiled in SOI to be good? Maybe the good time to buy Drana is simply now after all.

 

Thank you for reading,

Sylvain Lehoux

Insider: A Review of My Past 45 Days of MTGO Specs – 676 Tix Profit

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Today I'll go over my past 45 days of MTGO specs and the lessons that I've learned as a result.

I use a spreadsheet to record all of my MTGO trades and I recommend you do the same! Keeping track of your investments will allow you to find patterns in what works for you and what doesn't. On to the specs!

janfeb

Cards Bought and Sold Within the Past 45 Days

Abbot of Keral Keep

There was an error retrieving a chart for Abbot of Keral Keep

Quantity: 82
Buy Price: 3.26 tix (1/19)
Sell Price: 4.38 tix
Profit: 92 tix

The Logic: I decided to pick up some Abbots because of a pending Standard metagame shift with the arrival of BFZ. I think this is in general a good strategy for Standard MTGO specs---find a previously successful card that has temporarily lost favor and may benefit from the rise of a new deck or the fall of an old one.

Lessons Learned: Overall I'm happy with how this turned out. I could have maybe sold them for a bit higher of a price if I timed it well with the hype surrounding the U/R Prowess deck. I guess the lesson here is to try to build a powerful intuition as to when a card is hitting its max potential based on what decks it's seeing play in.

Deathmist Raptor

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Quantity: 72
Buy Price: 8.76 tix (1/19)
Sell Price: 11.38 tix
Profit: 188 tix

The Logic: Very similar logic as with the Abbots. A card that had proven itself in the past and may benefit from BFZ shaking things up.

Lessons Learned: I am very happy with the call but unhappy with the execution. Collected Company decks turned out to be the real deal. I was unsure if they were going to grab a considerable part of the metagame or only thrive during the infancy of the new format, so I sold when the price of Deathmist Raptor showed signs of weakness.

I think it would have been better to wait a bit, and I would have been rewarded with a much higher profit. At one time the card even reached 20 tix! I think I could have also safely bought many more copies of the spec. Overall I probably lost around 1000 tix due to poor execution. Ouch!

Dromoka's Command

There was an error retrieving a chart for Dromoka's Command

Quantity: 100
Buy Price: 3.43 tix (1/19)
Sell Price: 5.24 tix
Profit: 180 tix

The Logic: Again, same logic as Abbots and Raptors. A card that had proven itself in the past and may benefit from BFZ shaking things up.

Lessons Learned: I am overall pretty happy with the execution of this spec. Sure, Dromoka's Command has shot up to 7.4 tix due to the explosion of the G/W Hardened Scales deck, but I think this was a fluke that I would not have been able to predict. Maybe the biggest lesson learned here is that I could have bought a few more copies.

Zurgo Bellstriker

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Quantity: 101 (31 unsold)
Buy Price: 2.07 tix (1/20)
Sell Price: 2.30 tix
Profit: 16 tix

The Logic: Again, same logic as the last three specs. A card that had proven itself in the past and may benefit from BFZ shaking things up.

Lessons Learned: I am overall pretty happy with this spec. It didn't really work out, but I think it was a good call. I could have maybe sold into a higher price during the first week of the format when Atarka Red won the SCG Open. The lesson here might be to never underestimate the power of the red deck in week one of a fresh format.

From Beyond

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Quantity: 4
Buy Price: .05 tix (1/23)
Sell Price: .15 tix
Profit: .4 tix

The Logic: I felt this was among a cohort of strong BFZ cards that were mispriced due to never having the proper chance to prove themselves. Potentially a good spec if not for one issue...

Lessons Learned: The mind is like an attic! At some point I was distracted and stopped at 4 copies of the card. This a huge lesson for me: I need to restrict myself to specs that have the potential for big profits. Just because a spec is profitable, it doesn't automatically mean it's worth cluttering up your mind (attic) with it.

In general, as a Magic investor, you should keep in consideration not only the investment of time and money that goes into a spec, but also the investment of mental energy. Sometimes this means you will have to pass up specs you know are profitable but not worth tying up your mental resources. I know this is hard for me, but it's something I am getting better at.

Cavern of Souls

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Quantity: 24
Buy Price: 29.92 tix (2/06)
Sell Price: 28.88 tix
Profit: -25.18 tix

The Logic: As soon as I realized that Cavern of Souls was being played in Eldrazi decks, it seemed like a slam dunk. A tri-land that comes into play untapped and can make your creatures uncounterable? I picked these us as soon as I heard about it on the PT coverage.

Lessons Learned: Similar to the Raptors, this was a great call with terrible execution. I really needed to stick to my guns but got scared when the price started to drop a few days after the PT.

In hindsight, a price drop like this could only occur due to speculators cashing in a large number of copies right after the PT. I could have easily sold the Caverns for 40 tix if I waited a bit longer for the market to catch up to the new meta. This mistake cost me around 250 tix!

Archangel of Thune

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Quantity: 28
Buy Price: 17.54 tix (2/07)
Sell Price: 21.82 tix
Profit: 120 tix

The Logic: The moment I saw a top-performing Standard list at the PT sporting four Archangel of Thune, I knew the price was about to shoot up. I bought a few playsets and cashed in a few days later.

Lessons Learned: I am pretty happy with this spec, but the Angels are now 38 tix apiece! I think similar to my Cavern of Souls spec, I should have let the metagame sort itself out for a few weeks after making what I feel is a strong, logical investment. I'd estimate that my impatience cost me around 300 tix!

Holy Light

There was an error retrieving a chart for Holy Light

Quantity: 10
Buy Price: .32 tix (2/08)
Sell Price: 1.00 tix
Profit: 6.79 tix

The Logic: I was cleaning out some of my Pauper cards and realizing that Holy Light was at a low and very far below some of its historical prices, I decided to pick up a few copies.

Lessons Learned: See my From Beyond spec. The mind is an attic! It was a reasonable spec, but I should have passed on this opportunity.

Crush of Tentacles

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Quantity: 82 (20 unsold)
Buy Price: .59 tix (2/10)
Sell Price: 1.35 tix
Profit: 47.71 tix

The Logic: I have always felt that Crush of Tentacles is a powerful card that hasn't yet had its time to shine. It's also a fairly safe spec as a circa-50-cent mythic. When a U/B Demonic Pact deck popped up out of nowhere, the price spiked up a bit and I sold as many copies as I could.

Lessons Learned: None. Solid near-bulk mythic spec.

Eldrazi Displacer

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Quantity: 49
Buy Price: 2.14 tix (2/20)
Sell Price: 3.17 tix
Profit: 50.5 tix

The Logic: I picked up a bunch of copies as I was watching the SCG tournament where U/W Eldrazi was dominating. I sold into the hype a few hours later.

Lessons Learned: None. Solid short-term hype spec.

Cards Bought But Not Sold Within the Past 45 Days

BFZ/OGW Low Buy-in Specs

  • Planar Outburst: 100 copies at .14 tix each
  • Lantern Scout: 8 copies at .03 tix each
  • Woodland Wanderer: 35 copies at .02 tix each
  • Scatter to the Winds: 26 copies at .05 tix each
  • Inverter of Truth: 244 copies at .39 tix each
  • Exert Influence: 8 copies at .01 tix each
  • Smothering Abomination: 88 copies at .02 tix each
  • Radiant Flames: 20 copies at .13 tix each
  • Nissa's Renewal: 59 copies at .02 tix each
  • Fathom Feeder: 20 copies at .02 tix each
  • Beastcaller Savant: 16 copies at .03 tix each
  • General Tazri: 59 copies at .16 tix each
  • Bring to Light: 77 copies at .13 tix each
  • Ruinous Path: 21 copies at .19 tix each
  • Painful Truths: 169 copies at .55 tix each
  • Blight Herder: 4 copies at .01 tix each
  • Oath of Chandra: 4 copies at .01 tix each
  • Corrupted Crossroads: 68 copies at .22 tix each

Other Random Specs

  • Vedalken Shackles: 27 copies at 4.78 tix each
  • Seal of Strength: 4 copies at .5 tix each
  • Mantis Rider: 28 copies at .04 tix each
  • Chandra, Fire of Kaladesh: 63 copies at 1.89 tix each
  • BFZ Full Sets: 44 copies at 64.11 tix each
  • Pyromancer's Goggles: 28 copies at .39 tix each
  • Dragonlord Silumgar: 63 copies at 2.79 tix each
  • Predict: 59 copies at .03 tix each

We'll see how these specs turn out! A lot of the Standard ones have a long ways to go before they rotate. When I end up selling them, I can go through the logic and lessons like I did for the specs I sold in this article. I have a feeling a lot of them will end up being a giant waste of time and thought, but who knows?!

 

Thanks for reading! Have any questions or comments about any of the specs? Hit me up in the comments section!

Song of the Week: Emanicpator - First Snow (electronic)

Enjoy!

Insider: Preparing for Shadows Over Innistrad

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Magic feels pretty stale to me right now. I'm only being slightly facetious when I refer to Modern as Eldrazi, and Standard is fast approaching a rotation that will bring some big fundamental changes. With those changes will come new strategies, and with those strategies comes market shifts.

I know how much you all love market shifts. And if you love market shifts, you're really going to love the new price tag on Chandra, Flamecaller!

There was an error retrieving a chart for Chandra, Flamecaller

Chandra has been seeing play in Standard, and even fringe play in Legacy, though the price movement here is more likely indicative that it's time to start picking up cards for rotation. Chandra certainly hasn't seen the uptick in play that Nissa, Voice of Zendikar did with Hardened Scales showing up in force for GP Houston.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Nissa, Voice of Zendikar

I was big on pre-ordering Nissa, though I underestimated how long it would take this great card to find a home. The floor on Nissa has come and gone, and now prices are approaching pre-order prices. If you don't have a set, I really like picking these up now.

With the high-powered Khans block on the outs, cards like Nissa are a natural flagship for brewing in the new format. I've been saying since Nissa was spoiled that she has a natural home alongside Gideon, Ally of Zendikar, and Gideon currently looks to be at or near its realistic floor. If I didn't have a set of these cards I'd get on remedying that.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Gideon, Ally of Zendikar

As we frequently discuss on Quiet Speculation, now is the time to invest in real estate. With fetchlands rotating out, players are going to need four copies of battle lands for their decks. If you don't have your 20-set, get on that now.

If you're looking for a specific battle land to invest in beyond that, I personally like Canopy Vista the most out of the lot. After all, it's the battle land that casts both Gideon and Nissa!

There was an error retrieving a chart for Canopy Vista

Creature lands will likewise be seeing a big uptick, and notably the OGW lands are quite low right now. Needle Spires is just worth nothing, and Hissing Quagmire is very low as well.

Wandering Fumarole leads the pack in price from the small set, which is unsurprising as it's also the most powerful. I also like Izzet's position going into Shadows with Jace, Vryn's Prodigy still in Standard, so while Wandering Fumarole is the most expensive of the three, it is also the one that I currently have the most faith in.

Ultimately the value here comes down to which color pair sees the most play, but I like getting a set off all the enemy creature lands. Shambling Vent doesn't have a ton of upside at $4 and being in the large set, though if you don't want to rule out playing Orzhov in post-rotation Standard then I'd pick up at least a set. As I said though, my gut is pushing towards Wandering Fumarole the most.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Wandering Fumarole

Likewise, painlands will be seeing an increase in play in Standard. If you're not planning on owning a 20-set, then I should think it goes without saying you'll want to line up your painland investments with your creature land ones. That said, I like doubling up on the creature lands before I like doing so with painlands. These have been reprinted so many times, and your window to sell will be short. Of course, the time to buy on these was months ago anyway.

As for meat and potatoes spells, I agree with a lot of what Brian DeMars wrote this week. I don't think Dust Stalker is a playable card in 2016, though the two-mana Eldrazi---particularly Bearer of Silence---look like slam dunks to me.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Bearer of Silence

He's also on to something with Corrupted Crossroads, and indeed colorless lands in general seem great as we are forced to quit fetchlands cold turkey.

Suddenly, Thought-Knot Seer is looking like one of the best spells we could be playing. That said, I wouldn't be buying Thought-Knots right now. When Eldazi is banned in Modern there's a good chance that we see a dip, though the card is very likely to be relevant in Standard and it should bounce back in relatively short order.

Moving into the post-Khans Standard market, a fundamental lesson will be one Khans block itself taught us. Khans was wildly popular, and as such regular rares---even widely played ones---were just never worth anything. The fetchlands soaked up the vast majority of the set's value. Mantis Riders out of any other set would have actually made people real money.

Battle for Zendikar was also a very successful set, and as such I'm not loving non-land, non-Gideon cards. As such, my eyes are mostly on Oath of the Gatewatch at the time of this writing.

A card I'm optimistic about is Kozilek's Return. Part of what I like about it is its applications in both control and ramp decks. Fitting into multiple archetypes is a great place to be for a mythic rare. Not to mention that people were once willing to spend $20 for the card already.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Kozilek's Return

A big reason that I like this pick on top of the ability to fit into multiple archetypes, is that the ramp deck---the deck WotC seems to have actively pushed---doesn't lose much with rotation.

Losing fetchlands is a little bit of a drag, but not a killer. Losing Ugin, the Spirit Dragon is a bummer, but recent lists have been trimming on Ugin anyway. Both Dragonlord Atarka and World Breaker will be sticking around, and the Ramp deck is unlikely to be going anywhere.

There was an error retrieving a chart for World Breaker

On the topic of World Breaker, that card has leveled off since it pushed $10 from initial success after the OGW release. Right now the Rally deck is kind of messing up Standard, thought it actually loses quite a bit from rotation. I expect we'll see some worlds broken with Shadows over Innistrad's release.

~

We don't know a ton about SOI just yet, and indeed the most actionable information of madness being in the set has already pushed Jace, Vryn's Prodigy even higher. We'll have to wait and see if there's a reason to make picks other than the safe ones, though it is clear that the time to act on the pieces I discussed today is now.

Thanks for reading.

-Ryan Overturf
@RyanOverdrive on Twitter

Insider: Profiting from the Rise and the Fall of Eldrazi in Modern

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The Grand Prix triple-header of Detroit, Bologna, and Melbourne is here. We will see the Eldrazi invasion into Modern happen before our eyes, and it is not until the weekend comes to a close that the full extent of the horrors will be realized.

The Eldrazi have completely warped the metagame, and even if they don’t dominate this weekend, they have still destroyed all semblance of a fun and balanced format in the eyes of the average Modern customer.

WoTC has to act, and with the release of Shadows over Innistrad, they will. A land or two from the deck is going to be banned, and Eldrazi will be relegated to tier-two status in the metagame.

With a ban in April inevitable, how do we move forward on the financial front?

Seasonal Spikes

The prices of Modern cards saw huge gains over the winter. It was a surprise to some, but it shouldn't have been. Modern cards have spiked every winter since the format's inception, as evidenced by the price graphs of countless cards.

WoTC schedules high-profile Modern events in the winter and spring, so demand is high, but it begins to lag off as the year goes on and prices start to sag. The winter price spikes are not artificial however, but rather real price corrections, so prices remain elevated until they spike again the following winter.

This winter, the Eldrazi warped the market, and it's unclear which cards spiked due to real demand from Modern as a whole, or temporarily because of the Eldrazi. It’s imperative to differentiate between the cards that spiked because of real demand increase that will sustain through an Eldrazi ban, and the cards doomed to fall in price subsequent to a ban.

If a card spiked around the weekend of February 5th, the Modern Pro Tour, or any time afterwards, then it’s likely related to the Eldrazi---either used in the deck or against it---and its value is going to drop dramatically after the Eldrazi deck sees a ban. Eye of Ugin and Eldrazi Temple began to rise after Christmas in the final week of 2015, so any spikes around that time could be related.

Alternatively, cards that spiked earlier in December before the Eldrazi were on our minds will be safe. Ensnaring Bridge is a fine example of a card that will sustain its high value even through any Eldrazi ban.

The difficult thing is figuring out cards in between, and any outliers. For example, Crucible of Worlds saw a spike in the middle of January, after Eldrazi were known but before the Pro Tour. This is a card that, while useful with and against Eldrazi, isn’t necessarily tied to them, and I suspect it will maintain its value through a ban.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Crucible of Worlds

Take Action

If you're holding cards inflated from the Eldrazi, I would move off of them. It’s possible some cards will rise even after the Grand Prix if they have a big weekend, especially the anti-Eldrazi cards, but in general the peak will be right before the Grand Prix starts. Some cards may already be falling, but demand at the Grand Prix themselves is sure to be very high.

If you show up with the right cards to the Grand Prix you could make a killing, but be aware that other people may also have that plan. As the weekend wraps up, I am sure many players will attempt to unload cards, so we could see prices on some cards spiral downwards next week as dealers lower buy and sell prices.

Predicting the Future

There is a lot of money in determining where Modern goes after the Eldrazi become merely a memory. I expect the metagame will move to its most wide open point ever. It’s easy to forget that Amulet Bloom and Splinter Twin combo are gone, and there is a ton of space for other decks. Smart money is on the classic archetypes, so I recommend acquiring staples currently suppressed by Eldrazi.

Chord of Calling is going to be huge. It’s already a part of a few archetypes, like Abzan Company, Kiki-Chord, and Elves, and as time goes on players are using it in more ways with an ever-growing list of new creatures being added to the toolbox. Collected Company is another card that’s only going to get better.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Chord of Calling

Noble Hierarch and Birds of Paradise accompany these cards beautifully, so they are also great pickups, as are role-players like Eternal Witness and Wall of Roots. As a corollary, I’d target Grafdigger's Cage, one of the best ways to stop these decks.

Urzatron might be the biggest winner from Eldrazi being banned, and it will be a great deck even if it’s forced to cut Eye of Ugin. The Urza lands have been steadily growing, and I expect they will see a spike sometime after the Eldrazi ban. Major pieces like Wurmcoil Engine and Karn Liberated are big pickups, but staples like Chromatic Star and Ancient Stirrings are also cards to keep in mind.

Grixis Control was the hottest deck in Modern before the Eldrazi, and after a ban it will start back where it left off. Especially with Splinter Twin gone, we will see many of the best players work on this deck and develop it to a top contender. Cryptic Command and Creeping Tar Pit come to mind as cards that will grow with an increase in Grixis.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Cryptic Command

The classics are a great investment, and decks like Burn, Affinity, and Infect are going to be mainstays. I could imagine a day when Cranial Plating or even Inkmoth Nexus is banned, but I’m getting ahead of myself, and I highly doubt those would happen in April.

Burn is a big winner from the banning and very safe from potential bans, so I love buys like Eidolon of the Great Revel and Goblin Guide. Even anti-burn cards like Leyline of Sanctity could be strong pickups.

- Adam

Insider – QS Cast 25: Brains in Jars and Eyes of Ugin

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Play

This week, the cast talks about recent news in the Magic finance world, including:

  • Brain in a Jar, which is a stylistically very cool card
  • the UW Eldrazi deck’s mirror breaker in Calciform Pools
  • Whether Chandra Flamecaller is overpriced at $18 or Gideon is underpriced at $18

And plenty more!

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

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Fighting Eldrazi: History and Recent Technology

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For better or for worse, the events of tomorrow will forever go down in history. Children will be told tales of the weekend’s events; be they whispered over a smoldering fire in some remote cave, or trumpeted from the ramparts of some lofty castle. Eldrazi, or the Allies? The delicate fate of our very existence hangs in the balance, and the war for our future will be fought on three battlefields. Detroit. Melbourne. Bologna.

Dispatch art

I know not what the future will hold, but by looking at the past we can anticipate the results, or at least be forewarned of our coming doom. Let’s get started.

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The First 30 Days

February 8, 2016. The Day After Judgement Day

Hold on, I’m getting ahead of myself.

February 7, 2016. Judgment Day.

There we go.

From a dozen evil geniuses, Eldrazi was born. Atlanta was Ground Zero. Epics and tales aplenty have been written already on this event, but it’s worth looking back to see where we’ve been. Six Eldrazi decks in the Top 8 was seen as a harbinger of things to come, the genesis of the End of the World as we knew it. While a 75% single-archetype Top 8 doesn’t make for a “normal” baseline, it’s worth remembering how “bad” things have been when viewing present/future results. Often, when we’re tentatively looking at results through the lens of “Eldrazi is busted” even relatively normal results can seem disproportionate. One Eldrazi deck in the finals, win or lose, is just “expected”. Three Eldrazi decks in the Top 8 is “evidence”.

For reference, post Pro Tour OGW discussion went something like this:

Most of the discussion leading up to this weekend's events have similar. Those not playing are scoffing at those that are; patronizing them for wasting both time and money fighting the Eldrazi menace. Those who are playing are toe-ing the water hesitantly, or worse, slowly trudging towards the chopping block, certain of their fate. If the results of the Pro Tour are to be trusted, then the future is all but certain; Eldrazi, or death.

February 20, 2016. The Louisvile Slugfest

  • SCG Louisville Open Top 8
  • Winner: Affinity
  • Finals: Affinity vs. Eldrazi
  • Top 8
    • 2 U/W Eldrazi
    • 1 U/R Eldrazi
    • 1 R/G Eldrazi
    • 2 Affinity
    • 1 Kiki-Chord
    • 1 Merfolk

The results of PT OGW *could* have been explained away with the “destroyed an unprepared field” narrative. Then, SCG Louisville seemingly put the nail in the coffin for naysayers. Two weeks to prepare, and another Top 8 with at least 50% Eldrazi decks? Past that, 6 more Eldrazi decks in the Top 16? A full 10 out of 16 lists are Eldrazi!? Run for your *#)$* lives!

Still, there are some lessons to learn from Louisville. For one, Eldrazi didn’t win. That honor belongs to Affinity, with a couple notable characteristics.

"Affinity, Austin Holcomb (1st – SCG Louisville)"

Creatures

4 Vault Skirge
4 Signal Pest
1 Spellskite
2 Etched Champion
3 Memnite
4 Arcbound Ravager
4 Ornithopter
2 Steel Overseer
1 Master of Etherium

Artifacts

4 Cranial Plating
4 Springleaf Drum
4 Mox Opal

Instants

4 Galvanic Blast
2 Dispatch

Lands

4 Inkmoth Nexus
4 Darksteel Citadel
4 Blinkmoth Nexus
4 Glimmervoid
1 Mountain

Sideboard

2 Ghirapur Aether Grid
1 Spellskite
2 Whipflare
1 Torpor Orb
1 Dismember
2 Thoughtseize
3 Ancient Grudge
1 Chalice of the Void
2 Ensnaring Bridge

Most of the unique inclusions here are not new technology, and have been played before based on metagame factors/personal preference. Eldrazi’s presence in the metagame does put some pressure on the Affinity pilot to make a few changes, which we can see here. For those unfamiliar with the intricacies of Affinity deckbuilding, it’s normally a good idea to pull up some “stock” list to more quickly detect variations. Here, catch!

Galvanic BlastAffinity often chooses between Thoughtcast and Galvanic Blast, depending on where the metagame lies on the linear-midrange spectrum. Obviously Galvanic Blast is best when you want to slow down Infect/Burn, kill a troublesome creature, or finish off combo before their pivotal turn. Thoughtcast, on the other hand, is best when you need to power through disruption, fight midrange, and out-card removal spells. Eldrazi is, at its core, a high-powered, linear, aggressive deck with disruptive and combo elements. One-mana removal that kills almost everything is an excellent form of disruption.

Moving forward down this line, we see two Dispatches in addition to the playset of Galvanic Blasts. A Path to Exile with no drawbacks, we can be sure to almost always have metalcraft in every matchup, especially against an opponent with limited ways to clear the board.

Master of EtheriumSome specific things to note are the reduction of Etched Champion (poor against devoid creatures) and the inclusion of Master of Etherium (pseudo-haste the turn it comes down, and punishes opponents with limited removal). Also, Ensnaring Bridge in the sideboard is excellent, albeit slightly one-dimensional. We’ll often have our hand on the board by turn three, we can attack under it with Signal Pest tricks and Cranial Plating swaps after attackers are declared, and we can even go the Lantern Control route with Ghirapur Aether Grid. Unfortunately, opponents will be more likely to remove the Bridge as they’ll have Ancient Grudge and the like for us already, but the matches where we want this (linear semi-mirrors) will often see opponents with a minimal amount of interaction. Eldrazi and Burn can’t get rid of everything.

February 28, 2016. Classic Modern in Philly

  • SCG Philadelphia Classic Top 8
  • Winner: Jund
  • Finals: Jund vs. Eldrazi
  • Top 8
    • 2 U/W Eldrazi
    • 1 Jund
    • 1 Burn
    • 1 Storm
    • 1 Abzan Company
    • 1 Blue Moon
    • 1 Living End

Eldrazi DisplacerFast forward a week, and we’re seeing the story start to change. Yes, Eldrazi (specifically, U/W Eldrazi) is still the most represented deck in the Top 8. Yes, Eldrazi archetypes are still collectively putting up 40% metagame shares on MTGO. However, we’re also seeing evidence that Eldrazi can be beaten. We can never view one weekend’s events out of context and attempt to claim everything is “fine” (nor should we) just like we can’t look at one weekend’s events and demand an immediate ban. Step back from bias and look at SCG Philadelphia analytically, and take what you can from it. Maybe it’s a precursor for this weekend’s events. Maybe it’s a flash-in-the-pan. We won’t know until this weekend, but what we can know now is some tools to beat Eldrazi. We’ve already seen what Affinity can do (and Grixis Control!). How about... Storm!?

"Storm, Tim Sussino (4th, SCG Philadelphia)"

Creatures

4 Goblin Electromancer

Enchantments

4 Pyromancer Ascension

Instants

3 Desperate Ravings
4 Desperate Ritual
2 Grapeshot
4 Thought Scour
4 Manamorphose

Sorceries

4 Pyretic Ritual
3 Past in Flames
4 Sleight of Hand
4 Serum Visions
4 Gitaxian Probe

Lands

3 Misty Rainforest
4 Scalding Tarn
3 Shivan Reef
3 Snow-Covered Island
1 Snow-Covered Mountain
2 Steam Vents

Sideboard

3 Blood Moon
1 Defense Grid
1 Echoing Truth
4 Empty the Warrens
4 Lightning Bolt
2 Rending Volley

So, look, Storm is Storm. Either you love it or you hate it, it doesn’t really change much. If our opponents are busy casting things like Drowner of Hope and removal spells for Drowner of Hope, then Pyromancer Ascension is definitely where I want to be. Thought-Knot Seer is still annoying, but this deck still had to fight Thoughtseize and we saw it from time to time, and Pyromancer Ascension gets to come down before Seer in most situations. Besides, we’re cantripping so much anyway that Thought-Knot is really only taking a ritual, Serum Visions or something expendable, which is nowhere near as bad as turn one Thoughtseize taking a Pyromancer Ascension.

With Jund winning this event, I would be a little more hesitant than normal to attempt running-back Storm, as Thoughtseize/Abrupt Decay is definitely something I don't want to face. Thought-Knot Seer by itself isn't that scary, but if we're expecting a lot of discard this weekend then Pyromancer Ascension is not really where I want to be.

"Jund, Jonathan Delano (1st – SCG Philadelphia)"

Creatures

4 Tarmogoyf
3 Dark Confidant
1 Goblin Dark-Dwellers
1 Grim Lavamancer
1 Kalitas, Traitor of Ghet
3 Scavenging Ooze

Planeswalkers

4 Liliana of the Veil

Sorceries

1 Maelstrom Pulse
3 Thoughtseize
3 Inquisition of Kozilek
1 Damnation

Instants

3 Terminate
2 Kolaghan's Command
4 Lightning Bolt
2 Abrupt Decay

Lands

4 Blackcleave Cliffs
2 Blood Crypt
1 Bloodstained Mire
2 Forest
2 Overgrown Tomb
4 Raging Ravine
1 Stomping Ground
1 Swamp
1 Twilight Mire
4 Verdant Catacombs
2 Wooded Foothills

Sideboard

1 Ancient Grudge
2 Anger of the Gods
1 Devour Flesh
3 Fulminator Mage
1 Golgari Charm
1 Kitchen Finks
1 Night of Souls' Betrayal
1 Nihil Spellbomb
2 Obstinate Baloth
1 Thragtusk
1 Unravel the Aether

Comin’ atcha. Here we see a deck built to systematically destroy anyone looking to attack with creatures. Tarmogoyf wins heads up versus any non Reality Smasher monsters (Relic of Progenitus cases aside), and Liliana of the Veil is our three-mana win condition. Playing with Liliana of the Veil in Grixis Control showed me how potent it can be against Eldrazi’s plan of attack. For one, we kill Reality Smasher with no drawback, and can spend a “non-Terminate” removal spell to kill a “Terminate-only” creature (read: something bigger than x/3) while leaving a threat behind in the form of repeated discard/sacrifice effects.

Liliana of the VeilHowever, Eldrazi comes prepared to fight Liliana of the Veil with the manlands Mutavault and Blinkmoth Nexus. Often, Jund’s best plan is to Bolt/discard on turn one, kill something on turn two, and play Liliana of the Veil/kill something on turn three. Unfortunately, when a Mutavault is waiting in the wings, that plan is a lot less potent. In Grixis, I’ve had success playing Liliana of the Veil later, even if it means just playing a Kolaghan's Command on curve to have something to do.

Reid Duke debuted Kalitas, Traitor of Ghet back at Pro Tour Oath, and we still see it here today. I’m warming up to the card. Readers in the comments of my article last week suggested Kalitas as a nice Kalitas Traitor of Ghetaddition when we’re on the attrition/removal plan, so it’s no surprise to see it here in Jund. Goblin Dark-Dwellers might not have a place in Grixis (or it might: just my opinion) but Jund doesn’t have access to Snapcaster Mage, making it a lot easier for me to get behind here.

Jund has always fared poorly against Tron-style strategies, and we see it benefiting once again from big mana being pushed out of the metagame. Tron has all but disappeared in the face of so many Spreading Seas and Blood Moons, and it seems we can draw parallels to pre-Eldrazi SCG Charlotte Jund as a result. Without having to fight Tron, Jund can start trimming on Fulminator Mages/Crumble to Dusts in favor of extra help for Burn and Affinity. Two Obstinate Baloth, Thragtusk, and a Kitchen Finks make up for the move away from Huntmaster of the Fells in the main, and this list looks to be as fine as it always was against those matchups.

Also, maindeck Damnation.

Damnation

"Play Damnation and get over yourself!"
Me, February 11, 2016

Just saying 🙂

Some more SCG Philadelphia quick hits:

  • TasigurWith U/W Eldrazi moving away from Relic of Progenitus, we are starting to see decks like Living End creep back into the fold. Something to keep in mind, and more reason to play a singleton Tasigur, the Golden Fang in Jund.
  • Play Tasigur, the Golden Fang in Jund! Yes, I know I’m biased towards that card; after all, I just advocated moving back to it in Grixis Control. Still, playing a one mana 4/5 on turn five in addition to other spells is still awesome. BBB is hard to come by, but dropping a Tasigur alongside Liliana of the Veil is excellent at any stage of the game.
  • Blood MoonBlue Moon is intriguing, but I still find it a little underpowered. Since the debut of this deck, the power level of Modern has gone up, not down, which by itself isn't necessarily an indicator of archetype viability, but it is still something to keep in mind. We’re trading Celestial Colonnade, Path to Exile, Restoration Angel and white sideboard spells for Blood Moon in the main and more consistent mana? Still, it made Top 8, so I might be undervaluing Blood Moon. I have to imagine this deck falls apart if we see an uptick in Kolaghan's Command (for Batterskull) or Relic of Progenitus again. All those underpowered removal spells and counterspells really rely on Snapcaster Mage to keep up.

A holdover from last week:

You’re giving us SCG Classic Info and calling it Gold? ANYONE can win an SCG Classic! 

I almost didn’t include this because to do so would give this argument weight. Any event with a cut to Top 8 is worth some discussion. IQs are on the edge, because we have no way of knowing if the event had 8 players or 40, but Classics are still relatively high-level in my opinion.  Philadelphia even had 194 players! It’s not a question of lowering our bar, and it’s not about “taking what you can get”. Even though this isn’t Standard and it’s true we don’t have a high level event every weekend to analyze, that doesn’t make non-GP and Open events less worthy.

Conclusion

If I were fighting for the future of my children this weekend, I would be playing Jund. Yes, it won the last event, but that’s not why I’m playing it. Jund has both the power and disruption to go toe-to-toe with Eldrazi, and can be customized to beat almost anything it puts its mind to. Without Big Mana and Splinter Twin running around, Jund can hone in on matchups that have traditionally be 45-55 or 55-45 and start developing a significant advantage.

For those not interested in playing Jund, hopefully I’ve shown that technology exists across the archetype spectrum. Yes, Eldrazi still has fast mana which isn’t fair. Because of this, we might see it banned in a month. Still, until that happens, I’ll be focusing on ways to beat it, and hopefully you find this type of content helpful. If not, I’ll gladly talk about my interests in lasercutting or how awesome The Division is going to be until then (add me on PS4! TheArchitect-ID).

Thanks for reading, and I’ll see you next week!

Trevor Holmes
The_Architect on MTGO
Twitch.tv/Architect_Gaming
Twitter.com/7he4rchitect

Eternal Masters and Pauper

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Eternal Masters is a set that threatens to shake up card prices significantly. In fact, the two known cards from the set have already seen movement, and cards on the Reserved List have seen movement as a chain reaction relative to the set's announcement. While the set will shake up paper Magic significantly, there will also be some unique impact on Magic Online. Specifically, there are a lot of more expensive Pauper staples that wouldn't otherwise be reprinted that would tank immediately if they showed up in EMA. Daze strikes me as a prime EMA candidate, and with it being over twenty tickets a reprinting at any rarity would cause its value to plummet. I've already sold my set, and I advise others do the same.

There are a handful of other Pauper cards that have been under-printed, either because of the way Masques block was released on Magic Online or due to only being released in Masters Edition. Cards like Oubliette, which has been slowly creeping up, and Cuombajj Witches come to mind.

Witches

Cuombajj Withces has been falling in value, which indicates that players are selling. This could be due to a decrease in Gray Merchant of Asphodel decks, though personally I know I sold my set due to fear of a reprinting.

Some other cards that I'll be selling off before we have a full spoiler are Hydroblast and Pyroblast. These cards stand to plummet to fractions of a ticket with a reprint. If any or all of these cards end up not being reprinted in EMA, then I expect them to all be great positions to hold in the era of Pauper leagues, and what will be a long window before any realistic reprintings.

Insider: Expedition Finance Updates

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Since Expeditions were announced, I have been intrigued by the financial implications of their existence. There were so many questions about how they would affect the other cards in the set and what their price trajectory would look like. This is a topic that has drastically impacted the financial landscape of Standard.

Let’s start with the note I wrote to myself tagged to the buylist I manage every week.

“Mental note – Expeditions may make these prices tank so be careful with buy prices. If we see our inventory high with certain cards, we need to lower the buy price, especially at the low end.”

This note has been on my buylist since before the set was released and I added it to the Oath of the Gatewatch buylist as well. Think about it as a post-it note that I see when I pull up the buylist and that will put you in the right frame of mind.

Was this hesitancy necessary? I would say an emphatic yes to that question. My evidence to support the claim is Gideon, Ally of Zendikar and Ulamog, the Ceaseless Hunger. These are the only two valuable cards in the set and they can still be purchased for under $20 each.

After those two cards you have Drana, Liberator of Malakir and Ob Nixilis Reignited who can double the price of the pack you purchased. Then, you are left with about ten cards that equal the price of a pack. All the rest of the cards in the set are worth less than the cost of a single pack. So, if you hadn’t noticed, the Expeditions have truly had an impact on the financial state of Battle for Zendikar.

Even with how the price of singles has tanked, I was still wondering today if opening cases of Battle for Zendikar could be a profitable endeavor or not. The reason for that thought was due to a price analysis of the Expeditions that I was doing. Rather than doing a quick summary of the process, I thought I would go into a little more detail.

Expedition Tiers

What I found was something of a pattern emerging with the Expeditions. These lands are breaking up into groups according to their price. At first I thought that the lands from each set would follow a similar pattern. As it turns out, the two patterns fit into each other and do not mirror each other.

This ends up being unfortunate for the Oath cycle because they didn’t reach the price peak expected of them. Obviously players want fetches and shocks more than filters and random lands, but it was hard to predict the magnitude of the difference before the new crop was released.

In each category, I will show you which lands are included, their current price, and where I think prices will go.

For pricing cards like these, I always use a number in between TCG Mid and Low. Often times the low value is due to a damaged card but not always. Unlike with other cards, the low value represents what the card actually sells for.

This is a pricing strategy I use when I’m dealing with rare cards like this because players are often only looking for one copy of a card. For Standard cards you need a play set so the low value typically doesn’t work well.

Tier 1 ($150 - 250)

This tier consists of all the blue fetches plus Verdant Catacombs and Wasteland. I think we all predicted that the blue fetches would be the more desirable lands from Battle for Zendikar and that Wasteland would be the tip of the iceberg for Oath of the Gatewatch. The blue fetches should see even more gains in the future because they will be sought after by so many players.

Wasteland is the card I would be wary about from this category. With a set foil printing in Eternal Masters forthcoming, I think we could see the other Wasteland foils decrease in value.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Wasteland

It is possible that the new copies will just increase overall demand though. That is what happened with the other foil printings of Wasteland, but there should be more foil Wastelands from Eternal Masters than the other printings. It also has alternate art so that could factor into the price as well.

Let’s not forget about Verdant Catacombs as well. The green-black fetchland is still highly played, which is why we find it in this top category. Players love their Rock-style decks, and Verdant fits perfectly into that strategy as well as many others, like Infect. Verdant won’t keep pace with the others in this category, but it won’t be far behind either.

Tier 2 ($100 - 125)

The main feature of our second category is the other half of the fetchland cycle. I found it quite thought-provoking that more of the Oath Expeditions were not in each of the top two groups, but that goes to show you how valued the fetchlands are over other lands. Due to its abundance of play in Modern, Steam Vents also lands itself in this category. As the most played shock land, this is not surprising.

The other land found here is Horizon Canopy, due to it drastically high set foil value above $150. This unique green-white land finds a variety of homes in Modern, but is out of favor right now due to the dominance of Eldrazi. Death and Taxes style decks are quite popular and this land is a staple in the Modern versions.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Horizon Canopy

This is also one of the lands I would expect to be most hurt in the future. A reprint seems inevitable in the long term and if there’s a set foil lower than the original printing, that should help mitigate the price discrepancy.

Eye of Ugin is hanging on barely to its group here, but with the downward trend it may be in the next tier before long. I suspect that players are foretelling this land's impending doom at the beginning of April. Even if it doesn't get the ban hammer and Eldrazi Temple does, the viability of this card's main deck in Modern will disappear quickly.

If we see this land drop even further, I would highly recommend it as an investment. The Legacy Eldrazi deck is real and quite viable in that format. Investing in a low-print foil like this is exactly how you take advantage of the demand for Legacy foils.

I for one love playing Eldrazi and although jumping onto a popular deck isn't my typical drink of choice, in this case I'm definitely on board. Who knows, I may actually pick up the Legacy cards and give that format a shot again.

Playing a workshop style deck has been on my to-do list for a while now, and Eye of Ugin plus Urborg, Tomb of Yawgmoth functions so similarly to Mishra's Workshop that you can hardly tell the difference. I'm sure other players have been waiting for this style of deck to be better positioned in the meta for a while as well.

Tier 3 ($60 - 75)

Of all the groups on the list, this tier contains the most surprising prices. All of the shocks besides Steam Vents, Strip Mine, and Ancient Tomb are in this category together.

Despite there being a drastic difference in the playability of the different shock lands, they are all here discounting the most popular one. Over time, I would expect this group to spread out in price. Some of the less sought-after ones will stay in this range, while the more ubiquitous ones should definitely increase.

Of the shock lands, I would have expected Breeding Pool, Overgrown Tomb, and Stomping Ground as well as possibly Sacred Foundry to be sold at a higher rate than the others in the group. All four of these are major parts of the mana bases of the most played decks.

Breeding Pool is a feature of Infect and Scapeshift, Overgrown Tomb shows up in all of the midrange decks like Jund as well as Abzan, and Stomping Ground and Sacred Foundry help all the aggressive decks like Zoo and Burn. For these reasons, I would invest in these dual lands above the others in the group.

Due to the nature of the Modern format where mana bases are built around fetching the appropriate shock land, the fetches themselves will always be more valuable because they see play as four copies whereas the shocks can be included at a lower rate.

After the fetchlands, Ancient Tomb seems to be one of the best cards of the total group. Similar to Wasteland, the Sol land gets a ton of play in the same formats that make it so valuable. We see both of these regularly showing up in Legacy, Commander and cubes.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Ancient Tomb

I expect this to be one of the lands that grows the most over time. Not only does it have amazing artwork, but it will be sought after for players porting their Eldrazi decks over from Modern to Legacy.

Tier 4 ($40 - 55)

We’re nearing the bottom of the barrel but we still have a solid $50 group left before we arrive there. In this group we have only Expeditions from Oath. Surprisingly, the blue filter lands are in the same group with most of the rest of the cycle.

As I mentioned at the beginning of the article, the Oath Expeditions suffered from lower demand. Even though Oath contains some cool Expeditions, the filter lands are much less sought after than fetches and shocks. Why pay a lot of money for a land you will use less often? So, many more players are selling their Expeditions than holding onto them for the second half of the group.

As far as this specific cluster is concerned, the filter lands are cool, but unfortunately they don’t see much play in constructed formats. I do expect demand from casual and Commander players to drive the sales of these lands though. Just as in all the other groups, I do think there is room for growth.

Some of the filter lands, like Twilight Mire, have set foils that are equal to or greater than the price of their Expedition counterparts. With any lands like that, the price should grow to overcome the set foil pricing due to the perceived higher prestige attained by owning these Expeditions.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Twilight Mire

The exception here is Mana Confluence. In my opinion, it would take many additional factors for the price of Mana Confluence to increase.

In fact, this recent Standard rare could decline further in price before it plateaus. There are times when a Modern or Legacy deck might want four copies of this land, but the option for less painful lands like Gemstone Mine will always be there to hold Mana Confluence back.

Tier 5 (Under $40)

Lastly we reach the bottom of the barrel. Other synonyms for this group are dregs, leftovers, garbage, imperfections, scraps, and salvageable parts. These are the Expeditions that leave you feeling depressed that you cracked one of the worst extremely rare cards that have ever been printed. It’s amazing how opening a $40 card can feel so bad.

Our last group of the day contains all five battle lands along with the two least-played filter lands as well as the lands that could have been easily replaced with something else.

Of the cards in this group, the two oldest lands are the ones that surprised me. Kor Haven and Dust Bowl are both expensive set foils that exceed the Expeditions by nearly double their price. For this reason, I evaluated their initial price much higher, assuming that Commander players would change over to these foil versions. We could still see some growth for these two lands for this exact reason, but it may take longer.

As far as the rest of these misfits go, I’d be hard pressed to advocate buying in. There is some merit to buying more copies of the lowest-value cards to gain more profit overall. That’s why dealers are buying Khans fetches so aggressively and not making much effort to acquire copies from Onslaught. However, it’s doubtful that an uncommon or an underutilized land will increase much over the next few years.

Pay a couple dollars more and grab a card from the groups above and you should see higher gains than buying from this group.

For collectors and Cube enthusiasts like myself, there will always be an audience to purchase cards from this group. The main point is that the demand will be much lower for these than any others and this is highlighted by their current price.

~

The moral of the story is that most if not all of the forty-five cards in this cycle should have a value trajectory that points upward. Don’t go out of your way to purchase the slower rising options, but if you open one, I would be hesitant to move it for a couple years.

From a financial perspective, this cycle is definitely intriguing. We can learn a lot from what happens to these cards. I won’t be surprised when Wizards utilizes this model again and understanding the Expeditions will be key to making the most of the second time around.

Until next time,
Unleash the Force!

Mike Lanigan
MtgJedi on Twitter
Jedicouncilman23@gmail.com

The Last Stand at Grand Prix Weekend

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Detroit. Bologna. Melbourne. It is in these three cities that Modern players across the world will unite for a last stand against the Eldrazi apocalypse. From March 4 through March 6, all eyes in the Modern community will be fixed on the much-anticipated Grand Prix weekend. It has been one month since teams at Pro Tour Oath of the Gatewatch unleashed the Eldrazi on our unprepared world, and if the eldritch brood can be stopped, it will need to happen at these three Grand Prix events. Can Abzan Company, UW Control, and Living End unite to quell the rampaging colorless hordes? Will 30%+ of Grand Prix entrants swear fealty to Kozilek and Ulamog en route to dominating the Top 8 and Day 2 standings? Today, we'll take a last look at the current metagame numbers before making some predictions about the Grand Prix fight for Modern's future.

Modern Last Stand Banner

Many Modern players have resigned themselves to an April banlist announcement featuring at least one Eldrazi card. In that spirit, it is possible the Grand Prix weekend doesn't matter, and the colorless menace remains as format-warping as many, myself included, have claimed. Both Jordan and David have already offfered a theory-driven accounting of the deck's fundamental brokenness. Magic personalities such as Patrick Chapin, Shaun McLaren, Ari Lax, and Michael Majors echoed this assessment in varying degrees. That said, we've also watched authors such as Melissa DeTora and Craig Wescoe, not to mention our own Trevor, fend off the Eldrazi invaders.

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All this content is situated alongside the April banlist update, and no datapoint(s) will be more important on April 4 than Grand Prix weekend. Whether from an attendance, Day 2, coverage, or Top 8-32 perspective, the Eldrazi presence during the Grand Prix Three will seal both their own fate and determine Modern's trajectory for months to come. Final note before we get started: I'll continue to group all Eldrazi iterations under the "Eldrazi" supertype. Historically, this follows Wizards' classification methods for Deathrite BGx, Cruise URx Delver, BGx Pod, and URx Twin. Strategically, with a core of 20-24 cards shared between all Eldrazi decks, this grouping reflects the Eldrazi's engine. We should be justifiably skeptical, or outright suspicious, of anyone who argues for separating Eldrazi decks against these historical and strategic precedents.

Data Collection to Date

Today's article is the third in a series of Pro Tour Oath aftermath metagame analyses. You can check out the others below (metagame date-ranges shown too) if you want to see how we got to this point. Quick summary: the Eldrazi came, the Eldrazi saw, and the Eldrazi kept on conquering.

Today, we're covering February 5 through February 29, adding dozens of new decks and events to shore up our existing dataset. Last time we visited the Eldrazi Wastes, we evaluated a landscape of 46 paper events and 350 paper decks, on top of 32 MTGO tournaments and 320 online lists. Both of those samples have grown since then. On the paper side, we've jumped to 77 tournaments spanning 610 actual Eldrazi Templedecklists. MTGO is up to 43 Dailies and Leagues representing just over 400 individual finishes. This is almost what we would expect of a normal end-of-month metagame update (you remember, the ones we did before Modern started worshiping at the Eldrazi Temple), and we'll certainly reach that N value once the Grand Prix dust has cleared. For more information on data collection, check out our Top Decks page.

Following past metagame updates, today's article is about deck shares across paper, MTGO, Day 2 standings, and the overall metagame picture. Paper encompasses all 77 of those paper tournaments we talked about above, with MTGO covering its 43 events. Day 2 numbers include fields at Pro Tour Oath and SCG's Louisville Open. As for metagame-wide figures, these are weighted averages of paper, MTGO, and Day 2. The weighting is determined by the number of events in the current sample relative to the average N in previous metagame periods. Because N has increased substantially since our first Eldrazi survey, MTGO and paper are now factored about equally, with a slightly lower weight placed on the Day 2 percentages. This methodology will be familiar to Nexus veterans, but it's good to review in case you're joining us for the first time (or forgot where all those mystifying numbers come from).

Modern on the Grand Prix Eve

Let's start with some good news! Eldrazi's MTGO share decreased by a few percentage points since our last article! Meanwhile, Abzan Company, one of Eldrazi's most effective regulators, has advanced in paper and MTGO alike. We even saw a 194-player SCG Classic in Philadelphia with "only" two Eldrazi in the Top 8! If those facts don't excite you, you're either one of those doomsaying Modern-haters people keep bashing on the internet, or you've already read my mind about the bad news. Bad news time: Eldrazi's retreating MTGO share was exceeded by its advancing paper share for a net gain in the overall metagame. Abzan Company may have gone up, but almost every other Tier 1 deck went down (except Eldrazi!). As for the 194 players at the SCG Classic, a) there were four Eldrazi from 9th-16th, and b) Japan saw a 263-player event with five Eldrazi decks in just the Top 8... plus another four from 9-16.

Nervous about the Grand Prix weekend yet?

Molder SlugNumbers like these, and the tables I'm about to show, fill me with an overwhelming sense of dread for the upcoming tournaments. They also make me doubt the Craig Wescoes and Melissa DeTorras of the world, who sound increasingly like the people playing maindeck Oxidize and Molder Slug in 2005 to "exploit" Affinity's weaknesses. People keep claiming Eldrazi is a beatable strategy. They aren't (quite) wrong! As the numbers below show, the colorless monsters can be beaten, but not in a way that pushes them out of the format and not in a way that doesn't warp the metagame. We've tried to explain the Eldrazi away as a function of hype, lack of innovation, small sample sizes, natural format shifts, and other factors. I wasn't buying this two weeks ago and I'm really not buying it today when we've had more than enough data and time to dismiss all those excuses.

Maybe Grand Prix Weekend turns things around, but there is no way to spin the pre-Grand Prix metagame as anything other than a writhing, colorless nightmare. The chances of a Grand Prix turnaround are also appearing increasingly remote, similar to a Trump stoppage after Super Tuesday. We'll start our last pre-Grand Prix update in Tier 1, the most played decks of the format. As defined on our Top Decks page, these are the must-beat strategies you are likely to encounter at a tournament. They also have the highest chance of competitive success. In addition to giving deck shares in this date range, I'll give the change from last week's update to today's.

Tier 1: 2/6/16 - 2/29/16

DeckOverall
Metagame %
Meta% Change
(2/22 - 2/29)
MTGO%Paper%Day 2%
Eldrazi31.7%+1.4%40.7%25.5%29.6%
Affinity9.5%-0.8%9.1%9.2%10.7%
Burn5.3%-0.3%3%5.7%7.7%
Infect4.7%+0.2%3.2%3.8%8.3%
Abzan Company4.3%+0.7%3.5%5.1%4.2%
Merfolk3.7%-0.1%2.2%4.6%4.2%
Jund3.6%-0.5%2.2%3.8%5%

Ladies and gentlemen, it's official: Eldrazi's overall metagame share (31.7%) is now higher than that of all the other Tier 1 decks combined (31.1%). Is it time to bust out the Tier 0 table yet? Despite dipping almost 2% on MTGO, Eldrazi gained it all back in its +2% paper share. This translated to an overall 1.4% metagame uptick: the paper gains, spanning almost 30 events, were weighted heavier than the MTGO losses, which covered only 11 tournaments. Everything else in Tier 1 (which is really just Tier 0 Eldrazi collected companyand Tier 1 Everything-Else) had mostly negligible increases or decreases. Affinity and Abzan Company offered more meaningful stories, with the robots losing out in the face of additional RG (Ancient Grudge/Kozilek's Return) and UW (Stony Silence) Eldrazi hate, and Abzan Company continuing to prove itself one of the most reliable Eldrazi-slayers around.

As a final thought on Tier 1, we're still seeing zero Snapcaster Mages or blue-based control decks in the tier, yet another sure sign of an unwell metagame that never happened once in 2015. Not that we need any signs beyond Eldrazi's 31.7% share which, as I'll say again because it can't be overstated, is more than the combined shares of literally all remaining Tier 1 decks. This couldn't be further from the Modern we grew accustomed to, when the most-played deck always had at least 2-3 other strategies within only 2-3% points of the frontrunner. Guess that's what a Tier 0 format looks like!

Modern looks better in Tier 2, which boasts more archetype diversity and significantly smaller gaps between the most and least-played decks. We consider Tier 2 decks to be competitively viable strategies which can win tournaments but aren't necessarily represented in every event. You should know how to beat these decks, even if you aren't specifically sideboarding cards against them.

Tier 2: 2/5/16 - 2/29/16

DeckOverall
Metagame%
Meta% Change
(2/22 - 2/29)
MTGO%Paper%Day 2%
RG Tron2.4%+0.1%1.2%3.6%2.2%
Living End2.3%+1%4%1.3%1.6%
Abzan1.9%-0.2%1.2%1.5%3.7%
UW Control1.9%-0.1%2.5%1.6%1.6%
Grishoalbrand1.8%-0.4%0.5%1.8%3.7%
Blue Moon1.5%+0.1%1.5%1%2.2%
Kiki Chord1.4%-0.1%1.2%2%0.8%

For all intents and purposes, today's Tier 2 field is identical to the Tier 2 scene we saw last week. Grishoalbrand saw the biggest drop at .4%, with every other deck Living Endfluctuating by no more than .2% and most at .1%. That is, every other deck except the punchy Living End. The cascade combo is leading the anti-Eldrazi charge going into the Grand Prix weekend: its 1% increase in the standings was the second biggest jump of any Tier 1 or Tier 2 deck, almost matching Eldrazi's own +1.4% jump. Paolo Vitor Damo da Rosa vouched for Living End in a ChannelFireball article yesterday, and we've seen numerous pilots across the forums and online communities also champion the redundant Wrath effects represented by Living End's namesake sorcery. Bonus points for maindecking Ingot Chewer to smelt Affinity and Eldrazi artifacts, and Shriekmaw to terrorize all the Eldrazi sluggers (without even triggering Reality Smasher!).

Tier 2 is missing major aggro strategies, but there are enough of those in Tier 1 (Affinity, Burn, Merfolk) that I'm not too dismayed. Moreover, I'm pumped to see two hardcore, old-school blue control decks (UW Control and Blue Moon) scraping by in the Eldrazified world, as well as interactive policemen in Abzan and Kiki Chord. Grishoalbrand is scary, but its low metagame share, both in this update and in all previous ones since June 2015, suggests the deck is much less dominant than many Modern alarmists believe. As a whole, Tier 2 showcases smart and focused adaptation to the Eldrazi overlords, but also huge gaps between those anti-Eldrazi strategies and the 31.7% monster they are trying to bring down.

Finally, we end with Tier 3, the metagame-specific decks which might be competitive in certain venues depending on tournament circumstances, personal preferences, player experience, and other factors. No promises you'll either run into these decks or necessarily do well with them, but we shouldn't be surprised to see them in the right metagame context or, as we'll likely encounter this weekend, at massive tournaments like a Grand Prix.

Tier 3: 2/5/16 - 2/29/16

DeckOverall
Metagame%
MTGO%Paper%Day 2%
Ad Nauseam1.3%1.5%1.3%1.2%
Gruul Zoo1.3%0.7%1%2.5%
Suicide Zoo1.3%0.2%0.3%4.5%
Scapeshift1.3%0.7%1%2.4%
Lantern Control1.2%1.2%1.3%1.0%
Elves1.1%0.2%2.1%0.4%
Abzan Chord1%0.5%0.7%2.1%
Jeskai Control1%0.7%0.7%2.1%
Naya Company1%1.2%1%0.8%
Titan Shift0.8%0.2%0.7%1.6%
Death and Taxes0.7%0.5%1.3%0%
Abzan Liege0.7%0.5%1.1%0.4%
Martyr Proc0.5%1.2%0.2%0%
Allies0.5%1.2%0.2%0%

Lantern of InsightI can see any of these decks cracking a Grand Prix Day 2. I can also see any of these decks going 0-4 drop in the first few hours, so don't get too excited to see Allies at the bottom of that list. Same caution goes for Martyr Proc (Martyr of Sands plus Proclamation of Rebirth control; like Soul Sisters but with more Wrath of God elements). Big movers here include Lantern Control, probably the best deck to sit behind an Ensnaring Bridge, and Abzan Chord, a breakout Chord of Calling toolbox deck from Pro Tour Oath that eschews Collected Company for a different curve and combo. We will continue to see such Tier 3 decks placing both in Grand Prix standings and in smaller venues.

Whether you plan on beating the Eldrazi, joining them, or playing Cube and/or Hearthstone until April, it's impossible to deny how dismal Modern looks on the eve of these three Grand Prix tournaments. Eldrazi is comically ahead of other decks. Its tentacles creep down through every tier to warp their maindecks and sideboards while still lounging at the top on a 31.7% share. I'd be much happier if Eldrazi prompted a metagame-wide response that saw the deck unseated from its cyclopean throne. Instead, we observe everyone trying to beat Eldrazi and the deck is still towering over all the rest. It's 2011 Caw Blade and 2005 Affinity all over again, and we are unlikely to see this shift during the Grand Prix scenes in Detroit, Bologna, and Melbourne.

Grand Prix Metagame Predictions

I'm hesitant to talk about all three Grand Prix venues as one collective metagame. There are real regional differences within countries themselves, let alone across continents, and those are likely to play out in each individual event. That said, a Grand Prix is large enough, both in players and in profile, that regional differences are minimized as players comb the internet and their local results to gain metagame edges. We're also more likely to reach some notion of a normalized metagame as we add more players to the mix. All of this makes me relatively comfortable with grouping the three events together and talking about them as a unit. It's also almost certainly how Wizards and the broader Modern community will react to the tournaments, and with an issue as sweeping as the Eldrazi, it's important to stay in dialogue with that popular reception.

We've seen the overall metagame picture. Now it's time to translate those broader takeaways into specific Grand Prix predictions for the weekend.

  • Reality SmasherEldrazi will average 25%-30% of the events.
    We're going to see a lot of Eldrazi, but it's unlikely to exceed the 25%-30% range. This would put it in line with Bloodbraid Jund during Winter 2013, Cruise URx Delver during Winter 2014, and Abzan during Pro Tour Fate Reforged. Some will view this as a sign of Eldrazi's weakness (at least it ain't 40%, AMIRITE??) but they are historically misguided. Even a 20% average share would put the deck alongside Deathrite BGx and Siege Rhino Birthing Pod. Any higher would be either the worst of the Modern worst, or (if exceeding 30%) an unprecedented new standard of oppression.
  • Eldrazi will underperform from Day 2 into the Top 32.
    Numerous players, including David in yesterday's article, have observed what happens in polarized Deck and Anti-Deck metagames. In Day 1, the deck-to-beat smashes the competition and claims a Day 2 plurality. Then comes Day 2, where all the anti-decks with the best deck-to-beat matchup get more rounds against the strategy they are designed to clobber. This phenomenon will likely result in low Eldrazi conversions into the Top 32. It also won't matter much for overall metagame health because a) the deck already brutalized its way to a 25%-30% Day 2 share, and b) there will still be at least 6+ Eldrazi swarming around the Top 32.
  • Chord of CallingAbzan Company, Abzan Chord, and Blue Moon will excel.
    Non-Eldrazi decks are going to make Day 2. Indeed, if my predictions are to be believed, at least 65%-70% of the remaining field will be on familiar (but sorely missed) Modern faces such as Jund, Merfolk, Infect, and others. All these decks are sure to suceed in some measure, with a few maybe even reaching Top 8/16, but I'd bet on Abzan Company, Abzan Chord, and Blue Moon as the most competitive anti-Eldrazi decks of the day. All three strategies are proven Eldrazi-busters, and also have game against the decks/technology which will amass to beat Eldrazi. They had excellent Pro Tour performances, an event where the Eldrazi were totally unknown and still dominant, and have enough room for improvement to further enhance their matchup (e.g. the uptick in Roast/Flame Slash in Blue Moon).
  • There will still be two (or more?) Eldrazi decks in each of the Top 8s. 
    The hallmark of a truly broken deck is its continued presence at all tournament levels despite concentrated hate along the way. Eldrazi has repeatedly shown it can meet that benchmark, and I don't expect it to disappoint now. The real question is, will UW, UR, GR, or some other variant represent the deck's next broken evolution?

Wizards' Grand Prix coverage won't be all doom and gloom. We'll watch cool deck spotlights, hopefully for something that is either Tier 3 or totally unmentioned in this article. We'll cheer for Eldrazi getting righteously beaten up by something like Living End. We'll see at least one player make a Pithing Needle joke. And, of course, we'll be thoroughly entertained by commentators trying to spin Modern as a diverse format where you can play anything (so long as it comes in colorless...). I'll watch when I can and post any and all Day 2 updates, plus other metagame-related stats, as I hear them. I'll also be back next week to either congratulate the victorious rebels or pluck through the rubble.

The Eldrazi are Coming...

I'm not going to Grand Prix Detroit this weekend. Chalk it up to a combination of personal and professional life, an inability to find a deck that is both viable and exciting, and overall lack of interest in this current format. I'd love to sit down with Aaron Forsythe and talk all things Modern, but that 15-30 minute conversation doesn't justify the entire weekend and all the travel, especially if I wouldn't be enjoying the Grand Prix anyway. Oh well. At least David and Jordan will be there to chat up Forsythe. As for my janky awesome brews, there's always Grand Prix Indianapolis in August!

No matter how the Grand Prix tournaments end, there's no denying how warped the metagame has become. This is true with respect both to Eldrazi's almost comical metagame share, and to the other decks flailing around the sub-5% mark trying to challenge the beast. I'll be posting Tweets throughout the weekend to track the progress of all three scenes, and although I'm sure things won't be quite as bad as many fear, they are likely to be twisted enough to demand April action. It will be quite the comeback story if I'm wrong, but I've already got my feature art lined up for Monday and it's not a positive picture for the anti-Eldrazi resistance. Thanks for reading and I'll see you all in the comments with feedback on the article, thoughts on the analysis, projections for the weekend, and any burning questions you think our team needs to consider for Aaron Forsythe.

 

Thinking Like a Winner

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Season one of the SCG Tour hasn't been going exactly as I would like it to. I have had some success with two 8-1 finishes in day ones, a Top 32, and a few Top 64's, but that isn't going to cut it. The thing is, I know that I can do better than this. I have before, and quite recently to boot. I was in a slump and I didn't know why. After this weekend, I finally do.

I was unable to find reasonable travel accommodations for the SCG Philadelphia Open, so I decided to stay in town. As luck would have it, there were two really great tournaments going on. A local store called Level Up Games was having their own Players Championship, with 12 qualifying tournaments over the course of the year. Each of these tournaments is a 1.1k, and there was a Standard one this past weekend. Minnesota's RPTQ was happening this past weekend as well, and that also happened to be Standard. I was qualified for the RPTQ, and a 1.1k tournament sounded like the perfect place to get a bit of play-testing in before trying to qualify for the Pro Tour.

Below is the list I ended up running at both tournaments.  If I was to run a tournament tomorrow I would most likely cut one Sidisi's Faithful for one Grim Haruspex, and possibly cut the Liliana, Heretical Healer from the board for either an Anafenza, the Foremost or another Sylvan Advocate.

4 Color Rally

Creatures

3 Sidisi's Faithful
3 Ayli, Eternal Pilgrim
2 Sylvan Advocate
4 Jace, Vryn's Prodigy
4 Zulaport Cutthroat
4 Catacomb Sifter
4 Nantuko Husk
4 Reflector Mage

Spells

4 Rally the Ancestors
4 Collected Company

Lands

4 Windswept Heath
4 Polluted Delta
4 Flooded Strand
3 Evolving Wilds
1 Swamp
1 Plains
1 Forest
1 Island
2 Sunken Hallow
2 Prairie Stream
1 Canopy Vista

Sideboard

1 Liliana, Heretical Healer
2 Duress
1 Merciless Executioner
1 Fleshbag Marauder
1 Sylvan Advocate
1 Minister of Pain
2 Anafenza, the Foremost
2 Murderous Cut
2 Abzan Ascendancy
2 Dispel

On Saturday I got up early and got a run in to get my blood flowing. I have been doing this lately, and it has been amazing. I feel so much more awake for the tourney, and my energy levels seem to stay higher throughout the day. I write down my deck list on the deck registration sheet, and waited for round one to start. This is when I felt something I haven't felt in a long time. There was no pressure, just the feeling that I'm going to do great today. It was a weird feeling for me to get, as I haven't felt it in a long time. This is what has been missing for the past two months or so. I knew that most of the players that showed up to the tournament were good enough to take the tournament down, but I just felt like the tournament was mine for the taking.

I went through the first half of the swiss unscathed before taking a loss to Konstantin Brakefield. Remember this name. There might be a test later. When I lose, I usually start immediately trying to figure out what I did wrong, but this time I jotted down a few notes to review later and got ready for my next opponent. I finished out the swiss with two more wins and a draw, putting me at 5-1-1 and into the top 8.

Once again, I'm paired against Konstantin as my quarterfinals opponent. As you'll recall, I lost in our first meeting. This is the perfect time for me to start counting the ways to lose, as I already have lost two games to him. But I don't start thinking about that, I just start thinking of the ways that I can win this matchup- Grixis Dragons. It's basically RB Dragons with Jace, Vryn's Prodigy, Silimgar, the Drifting Death and Dispel out of the board. Game one I get to do whatever I want, as there isn't any counter magic main, and then post board I get aggressive with Anafenza, the Foremost and Sylvan Advocate. My plan worked out, and long story short I continued riding my winning feelings to a 1st place finish.

pablo-picasso-artist-he-can-who-thinks-he-can-and-he-cant-who-thinks-he-cant-this-is

This quote is something that I read in a poker book a long time ago, and recently in a fortune cookie. I'm serious, I have the fortune in my wallet, and it is something that I believe to be very important to everything you do. The message is simple enough, but so many times I hear the opposite from so many people. There are many reasons that you hear it; the matchup is too tough, my opponent is better than me, I didn't wear my lucky boxers, etc... I think that I lost sight of this as well during my most recent battles on the SCG Tour. I would sit across from my opponent and put so much pressure on winning that the pressure invented ways I could lose, and because I saw these as real possibilities I would end up losing.

Finding myself in a good head-space for the first time in too long, I was super hyped to play in this RPTQ. I played great, and even beat Konstantin again in the swiss. Everything felt as it was when I was playing last year and was on a huge tear. Then in the Quarterfinals I was paired against- you guessed it- Konstantin Brakefield. Even though I felt great about the matchup and I was in the right frame of mind, I still lost. That's just Magic sometimes. I won't let it get me down. It hurts a bit knowing I was so close to making the Pro Tour, but I will get this chance again, and I will be ready to win.

There are so many things that go into preparing for a tournament. I know many of you will playtest late into the night, but remember if you don't believe in yourself you have already set yourself up for failure. Everyone can be beaten, and no matchup is unwinnable unless you already haven given up on yourself.

Congrats to Konstantin on his qualification for the Pro Tour. It has been a long time coming and well deserved. You better qualify for the next one too, so I can see you there.

Once again thanks for reading!

Follow me on Twitter @conanhawk

Insider: MTGO Market Report for March 2nd, 2016

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Welcome to the MTGO Market Report as compiled by Matthew Lewis. The report will cover a range of topics, including a summary of set prices and price changes for redeemable sets, a look at the major trends in various constructed formats, and a "Trade of the Week" section that highlights a particular speculative strategy with an example and accompanying explanation.

As always, speculators should take into account their own budget, risk tolerance and current portfolio before buying or selling any digital objects. Questions will be answered and can be sent via private message or posted in the article comments.

Redemption

Below are the total set prices for all redeemable sets on MTGO. All prices are current as of February 29th, 2016. The TCG Low and TCG Mid prices are the sum of each set’s individual card prices on TCG Player, either the low price or the mid price respectively.

All MTGO set prices this week are taken from Goatbot’s website, and all weekly changes are now calculated relative to Goatbot’s ‘Full Set’ prices from the previous week. All monthly changes are also relative to the previous month prices, taken from Goatbot’s website at that time. Occasionally ‘Full Set’ prices are not available, and so estimated set prices are used instead.

Feb29

Flashback Draft of the Week

This week, Saviors of Kamigawa gets added to the mix so it will be the complete Kamigawa block draft format for flashback fiends. If you've been waiting to buy your play set of Through the Breach or Goryo's Vengeance, this would be the week to pull the trigger.

Modern

All of the redeemable Modern sets rebounded in price this week as speculators and bots tried to take advantage of recent price declines to stock up on Modern staples that have fallen on hard times. Check out the Trade of the Week section for an in depth breakdown on Keranos, God of Storms from Journey into Nyx.

This weekend will feature three GP Modern events, so we should get a look at the final iteration of the Eldrazi freight train before one or more key cards of the deck is banned in April. If you are holding Eye of Ugin (as I am in the Market Report Portfolio), this will be a good weekend to sell.

Standard

All sets in Standard took a hit this week. It's very unusual for a small set like Oath of the Gatewatch (OGW) to rise in price while it's being drafted, so it's no surprise that gravity intervened this week to bring the set price back below triple digits. Sealed leagues will also be a catalyst for lower prices over the next month.

The two other big drops were in the sets that will rotate out of Standard in April, Khans of Tarkir (KTK) and Fate Reforged (FRF). Both of these sets are starting to look like good value relative to their paper counterparts.

In particular, Shaman of the Great Hunt out of FRF went below the sale price of 0.01 tix on Goatbots. This price is unheard of for a mythic rare from a redeemable set, so I am paying close attention to the price of FRF mythic rares at the moment as the set looks to have long-term value at current prices. Small sets have a large hurdle to see demand from redeemers due to the flat redemption fee taking a chunk out of the value of fewer cards, but FRF could be the set that bucks this trend.

KTK is also a riddle. Of course it will have long-term value due to the fetchlands. But since this cycle of rare lands is so essential to Legacy and Modern play, the value will tend to accrue in the lands themselves and not in the mythic rares of the set. If a mythic rare got below 0.2 tix, it would be a good long-term bet, but my normal price limit of 0.4 tix on a mythic rare is too high.

Standard Boosters

BFZ boosters are moving up this week in anticipation of the introduction of Sealed leagues. Initially these leagues will be only for Battle for Zendikar block and play will be structured the same as constructed leagues. Start a new league run, play five matches at your leisure, and then collect your prizes.

The last time sealed deck leagues were available on MTGO was before the introduction of Version 3 of the client, released in 2008. Back in the day, you could add a booster to your league deck every week, giving you a chance to upgrade your deck or try out different builds entirely.

Sealed leagues are great for the exact same reason as constructed leagues. You don't have to commit 2+ hours to playing MTGO, which is required for a draft. This reintroduction of a way to access Limited play on MTGO will bring back an under-served demographic in the MTGO economy and result in a step-wise increase in demand for BFZ and OGW boosters.

As long as there's a discount to buying boosters for league entry on the secondary market relative to the store, there will be demand pushing up the prices on these boosters. Look for BFZ boosters to head closer to 4 tix over the next two weeks. I give it a 90% chance that BFZ boosters will be 4 tix within three weeks.

FRF and KTK boosters are the other candidates for speculators, as they sit at 2.0 tix and 3.3 tix respectively. Both are up nicely in the last month since OGW release events ended. There is room for further gains on these, but speculators should not hold onto these past the middle of the month in order to get out ahead of these sets rotating out of Standard.

On the MTGO tumblr, Lee Sharpe answered whether or not FRF would still be used in draft after it rotates out of Standard. It turns out they will be offering triple DTK drafts instead of DTK-DTK-FRF drafts. This is important as the values of both KTK and FRF boosters will plummet once you can no longer draft with them.

Trade of the Week

As usual, the portfolio is available at this link. Like other MTGO speculators in the Quiet Speculation community, I was paying close attention to Keranos, God of Storms in recent months. After rotating out of Standard, this card more than doubled in price due to being a key card in Splinter Twin main decks and sideboards. After the banning of that card in January, Keranos had fallen back to below its pre-rotation price.

This type of rapid rise and fall in a card's price, especially of this magnitude, is unusual; but it has roots in a few factors. First, the card was an essential part of a top Modern deck and interest in Modern has been ramping up, peaking with the introduction of Modern leagues and Pro Tour Oath of the Gatewatch. Second, the card itself is a mythic rare from a small third set, which is often a recipe for low supply.

These two factors laid the foundation for the price swings we've seen, but the swings themselves occur due to the nature of the economy on MTGO. The MTGO market is very competitive and bot margins as a result are often as low as 10%, if not lower. Unlike your local game store, which basically has a monopoly to sell Magic in a small area, bots are always in competition with each on MTGO and they are forced to eke out their profit from these low margins.

One of the adaptations the bots have implemented in the last two years is adaptive pricing. If they start selling a lot of a particular card, they will start raising the price. There's a similar effect on the way down, though prices are quite a bit stickier on the way down as they tend to fiddle with buy prices first before they start reducing their sell price.

The end result is that prices on a given card tend to overshoot on the upside and on the downside.

keranos

Taking a look at the price history on Keranos, we can see two times when the price recently overshot to the upside.

After Modern Masters 2 was released, the price vaulted from about 10 tix to 25 tix by the time Magic Origins was released. By the time Theros block rotated out of Standard, it had sunk back down to about 18 tix. Although the long-run value and price of any individual card is hard to pin down, it had basically overshot its price by about 7 tix in this case.

After BFZ was released, the blue-red god started the next process of overshooting, peaking close to 50 tix just prior to the banning of Splinter Twin. Since then, the card has plummeted back into the teens. Now we are witnessing an overshoot to the downside. The card has fallen too far relative to its long-run value. Right now, we are witnessing the rebound and it's no big surprise that it's sitting around 18 tix again.

Although I wasn't able to buy at the absolute bottom of around 13 tix, a price below 18 tix seemed like a very good long-term bet to me. The eventual banning of one or more key components in the Modern Eldrazi decks will open space for slower strategies, and Keranos has proven to be a key card for control decks.

I'll be paying attention to this card over the next month. If it starts drifting down back below 15 tix, it will be time to start buying again.

The Grand Prix is Coming

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Grand Prix Detroit looms at the end of this week. I'm hopeful the tournament goes well and isn't a colorless nightmare, but the opportunity for the community to grill Aaron Forsythe is worth it regardless. That being said, it is hard to imagine Eldrazi won't be the driving force behind the Grand Prix metagame, though maybe not the way you expect.

All Is Dust banner

The data available from our Top Decks page tells a very clear tale of Eldrazi's dominance, but it is important to remember, barring massive resource expenditure, such data will always provide a lagged result due to the time between collection and the analysis. I bring this up because we have a very interesting narrative from StarCityGames' Modern Classic in Philadelphia that bears investigating. Once we have a better understanding of this narrative, we can attempt to apply the lessons to the greater metagame and inform our approach to the Grand Prix.

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Classically Modern

It's important to remember SCG Philadelphia only constitutes a single datapoint in the wider metagame and should not be seen as indicative of a wider narrative. Even so, the data within it is suggestive enough to be worth investigating. For reference, the Top 16:

Deck NamePlace
Jund1
UW Eldrazi2
Burn3
Storm4
Living End5
Bant Eldrazi6
Abzan Company7
Blue Moon (UR Control)8
UW Eldrazi9
Jund10
Infect11
Colorless Eldrazi12
Zoo13
UW Eldrazi14
Colorless Eldrazi15
Merfolk16

Hmm, that's quite interesting. Only two Eldrazi made Top 8, with six in the total Top 16. That's not exactly cause for celebration, but it's far less than we've become accustomed to since the Pro Tour. Without Round 0 data, I'm loathe to read any further into this, since we don't know if this is indicative of the population or not. If Eldrazi was 40% or more of the total field then this is about what you'd expect, or even a bit low for the top tables, but if it was less than 20% then this is very high representation. Regardless, the results are still interesting. Despite rumors of its demise, Jund won the whole thing and put another pilot into the Top 16. And it had to beat UW Eldrazi to do it, what appears to be, by consensus, the best version of Eldrazi. Jund's removal package (including maindeck Damnation) was deemed too slow, and Jund's threats too easily outclassed, for the deck to remain viable, yet Jonathan Delano either didn't get the memo or he agrees with Trevor about beating Eldrazi.

Jund by Jonathan Delano (1st Place SCG Philadelphia Modern Classic)

Creatures

3 Dark Confidant
1 Goblin Dark-Dwellers
1 Grim Lavamancer
3 Scavenging Ooze
4 Tarmogoyf
1 Kalitas, Traitor of Ghet

Planeswalkers

4 Liliana of the Veil

Sorceries

3 Inquisition of Kozilek
3 Thoughtseize
1 Damnation
1 Maelstrom Pulse

Instants

4 Lightning Bolt
3 Terminate
2 Kolaghan's Command
2 Abrupt Decay

Lands

4 Blackcleave Cliffs
4 Verdant Catacombs
4 Raging Ravine
2 Wooded Foothills
2 Overgrown Tomb
2 Blood Crypt
1 Stomping Ground
1 Bloodstained Mire
1 Twilight Mire
1 Swamp
2 Forest

Sideboard

1 Nihil Spellbomb
3 Fulminator Mage
1 Kitchen Finks
2 Obstinate Baloth
1 Thragtusk
1 Ancient Grudge
1 Devour Flesh
1 Golgari Charm
1 Unravel the Aether
1 Night of Souls' Betrayal
2 Anger of the Gods

The old workhorse rides again! Jonathan's list looks fairly stock, but has also clearly been tuned for the Eldrazi. Abrupt Decay is reduced to a two-of in favor of an additional Terminate and Damnation, while an Inquisition of Kozilek has been exchanged for Thoughtseize. The surprisingly strong (especially against UW) Anger of the Gods comes in from the board. While many might have said it takes far more aggressive tuning and rebuilding of your deck for Eldrazi, Jonathan apparently understands it's dangerous to neglect your deck's core and kept the essentials, a smart bit of tuning that paid off.

Ensnaring BridgeLooking at the other non-Eldrazi we see similar subtle adaptations. Bryant Cook played three Ensnaring Bridges in his Burn sideboard, a rarely seen addition acknowledging the betenticled monstrosities' speed. Brett Schmuckler's Living End played  a Goblin Dark-Dwellers in case Eldrazi sandbagged Reality Smashers. Benjamin Nikolich's Blue Moon has maindeck Roast and Flame Slash, which fry all Eldrazi but the largest Endless Ones, to complement four Blood Moons.

What I find really surprising is Tim Sussino making fourth place with Storm. You don't see much Storm period normally due to its vulnerability to discard and now Thought-Knot Seer (disruption that hoses Pyromancer Ascension and Past in Flames AND provides a strong clock). This leads me to conclude Tim is either a very experienced pilot or got very, very lucky in the pairings (leaning towards experienced here; he played the deck back in 2014 in an old Premier IQ).

Now, again, lets not get ahead of ourselves. This is just one event. However, in this event, good preparation and a solid core were rewarded with success despite the known power of Eldrazi. As we move into Grand Prix Detroit, it is always tempting to metagame hard and really try to target the top-tier decks, but as Jordan and I have warned you before, there is no guarantee it will pan out. Philadelphia indicates the Modern metagame is more open than you might think, so plan accordingly.

How to Approach Grand Prix Detroit

The question that this is all leading to is "how do I prepare for the Grand Prix metagame." The answer is simple: Don't. That's it, I'll see you in the comments!

*Footsteps fade, a door creaks open, then clicks shut*

*A door creaks open, then clicks shut, footsteps approach*

Sorry, I'm back. The note attached to the brick just thrown through my window says I need to actually explain that statement (people just have no appreciation for laconic pithiness).

As I've warned you before, it is far easier to Next Level yourself than it is to Next Level the room. While there is value and percentage to be gained in accurately reading and accordingly preparing for the metagame, guessing wrong can be disastrous (playing Scissors expecting to only hit Paper in later rounds and instead playing nothing but Rock). This is especially true for a large and open event like the Grand Prix. Given the trend, you have to expect at least 500 players to show up, likely around 1000. Basic statistics tell us that as sample size (N) increases, the sample distribution becomes increasingly normal (the bell curve, for those unfamiliar with stats).

Reality SmasherThus, a given Grand Prix metagame sample will be more likely to accurately reflect the "real" metagame. Look back at Top Decks, whose N is similarly high enough to reasonably model the "real" metagame, Eldrazi holds 23.6% of the paper format. This means your odds of seeing Eldrazi at a paper tournament in a given round is about 1/4, really closer to 1/5. Now, this is high and prior to Oath of the Gatewatch your highest odds for seeing any given paper deck were 7/100 (Affinity's 7% paper share in December), which you might think makes targeted metagaming more useful today than it was in December and early January.

Hold on! You have a 3/4 chance to not hit Eldrazi in a given round, which over a nine-round Day 1 means you could plausibly never hit Eldrazi at all. This means you warped your deck for nothing. If Eldrazi's share was over 1/3 or 1/2, closer to Ravager Affinity at its 2004-2005 worst, then it would be a smart move to target the deck as a number of Grand Prix winners of that era did. Players tried that against Caw Blade but it didn't really work because A) that deck was just all the best cards and lacked a targetable weak point and B) Caw Blade just had a better A game than the anti-Cawblade decks and overpowered or outplayed them. Those that claimed their deck beat Caw Blade were mostly fooling themselves. Therefore, if you're looking to gain an edge at this Grand Prix, I would advise you to fall back on the established principles for Modern deck construction, namely:

  1. Have a solid maindeck Plan A
  2. Know your weaknesses
  3. Know which weaknesses can be fixed and which can be ignored
  4. Have general answers or be able to ignore rogue strategies

Getting a Plan Together

If the first three points are a surprise to you, then you probably shouldn't go to the Grand Prix. That said, even if you may not have been explicitly told these points before, you still probably know them intuitively. So remember you know them, remember you built your deck accordingly, and STOP SECOND GUESSING YOURSELF! I've seen students and colleagues lose faith in their knowledge and psyche themselves out prior to tests hundreds of times and perform poorly as a result. Have confidence in yourself, dammit!

Shadow of DoubtSimilarly, as large tournaments approach nerves will always crop up and make you doubt your preparation. Doubt leads to audibles, audibles lead to misplays, misplays lead to rage, rage...leads to suffering. Unless you come late to an utterly broken deck, never throw out weeks of preparation and, even then, only do so if it's a reasonably easy deck to play. This is easier to do in Standard, where the decks are fairly well-known (especially toward the end of a format) and limited in number, meaning that maindeck and sideboard strategies are relatively easy to pick up. Modern is a much different beast and it takes dedication and practice to get the most out of a given deck. You're just not going to get that right before the tournament. Couple that with the scale of the format and trying to learn matchups is nearly impossible in the short period before a tournament. You need a REALLY good reason to audible in Modern. If you're asking at all if your reason is good enough, it isn't. Put the brew down and back away. Now.

The best way to avoid this problem is to decide a hard deadline for setting your deck in stone. For Grand Prix tournaments, I set Thursday night for maindecks and Friday night for sideboards, if you're scouting at the pre-GP events, and Friday morning otherwise. This removes the temptation to fiddle with and (in all likelihood) ruin your deck, giving you plenty of time to work the nerves out of you system. The more confident and relaxed you are, the better you will perform. That, plus familiarity with your deck, is far more beneficial than some new "tech" you convince yourself of the night before. Give yourself time to get your mind off the game and relax so that you're well rested and ready for the actual tournament.

The Flaw in Every Plan

The greatest other trap that players (myself included) fall into has to do with the last two points about fixing/ignoring weaknesses and having general answers. This is also related to our earlier metagaming discussion. I struggle to succinctly explain this in principle, so I'll use myself as an example.

I know that, as a Merfolk player, my deck is very weak to green creature strategies, particularly aggressive ones. For a very long time, I have used Hibernation to close that hole and as a bonus I have a devastating answer to Bogles.Hibernation However, I know Zoo, Elves, and Bogles constitute a very tiny segment of the metagame (4% today, if we're generous). This leads me to want to cut them but I don't know for what. I could go for additional Echoing Truths to hit the broadest possible decks and close my weakness to Worship, Ensnaring Bridge, and Ghostly Prison, all cards I know see a reasonable amount of play thanks to Eldrazi. That said, if I hit said green decks, I'll want something more powerful like Reflector Mage. I know, for the above stated reasons, that the choice is always going to be a guess and I could guess wrong, but that won't stop me from worrying about it until the tournament is over and I'm either vindicated or infuriated.

As a result, I am more likely to refuse to make an actual decision and split the difference to hedge against the most decks. While this is the safest option, it may not be the "best" option, either practically or theoretically. Game theory has two overarching branches: Classic and Romantic. A Classic strategy focuses on loss minimization while Romantic stresses profit maximization. Studies generally find that, over the short-term, Classic strategies do better since, while wins are small, losses are small too and good play will net a profit. However, over a longer period, Romantic strategies often have a higher payout because when they win, they win big and their losses are rarely large or frequent enough to eliminate the size of the wins. This leaves players in the unanswerable position of choosing to play to not lose or play to win for a given iteration.

Setting a hard deadline helps with this problem, but it doesn't eliminate the problem entirely and can cause the doubt which leads to misplays or tilting. The only way I've found to quiet this doubt is to convince myself I've made the right call and stick with it. How do I do that? By answering the question at the start of this discussion.

How Do I Prepare for the Grand Prix Metagame?

Easy: by not preparing for "The Metagame" and instead realizing what it represents. For the reasons I stated above, you can't base your decisions around the metagame stats as numbers in and of themselves. What you can do is understand their significance and how players will react to them. You can throw around numbers all you like: they're just numbers unless you understand what they mean. You have to interpret your data before it becomes useful.

worshipTaking the Top Decks stats and the SCG results tells me two things. First, that Eldrazi may be popular but format stalwarts are still perfectly viable. Second, that players are adapting to Eldrazi by tweaking their maindecks and sideboards with anti-Eldrazi cards. What this means for the metagame is there will be a large number of decks that will have either a fairly narrow range of very powerful permanents that lock out the fast Eldrazi starts and have considerable game against other more fair creature strategies or by adopting sweepers and removal that I already play around. This means, rather than worry about certain decks, I need to worry about specific cards.

DisenchantAs rounds go on, I am more and more likely to see anti-Eldrazi cards and less likely to see other decks that are weak to those cards. As Brian Kibler said, as a tournament goes on in a world of anti-decks, the number of targeted decks at top tables decreases in favor of the anti-decks. Since I have two byes I should assume by the time I actually sit down to play the Grand Prix, the wheat will have started to separate from the chaff and I will be more and increasingly likely to hit Worship and Ensnaring Bridge than I am decks that lose to those cards and/or to Eldrazi like Zoo and Bogles. I should instead focus my final sideboard slots to answer the splash damage. This could mean additional Echoing Truths so that I'm never without something for creature decks, but it might also mean that, for the first time in a long time, I might play Disenchant. Only testing will tell.

I intend to play in Grand Prix Detroit, so sometime next week you'll likely hear how that went, how I finally resolved my sideboard dilemma, and if I was right about the metagame. In the meantime, keep testing, trust those results, and believe in yourself. I'll see you in Detroit!

Stock Watch- Yawgmoth’s Will

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The announcement of Eternal Masters sparked a lot of market movement for Reserved List cards. The whole thing is rather stupid, though it would be irresponsible of me to just ignore it. Yawgmoth's Will is a card that has predictably seen a price spike in the wake of the EMA announcement.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Yawgmoth's Will

A perennial Vintage staple, and a card that is apparently legal in Commander, this was a position that was inevitably going to increase in value given its Reserved List status. This card is definitely a hold, so chiming in now that the price has inflated some isn't great information, and I'm not here to tell you to buy in now that the price is higher. At least, I'm not telling you to buy the Urza's Saga printing...

What I am advocating is picking up the judge promo. With actual demand for this card being relegated to Vintage and Commander, the foil printing makes a lot of sense as an investment option. More importantly, with the non-foil printing seeing movement, it doesn't make much sense that the foil printing hasn't.

$80 is a steep buy-in, and indeed cards of this nature have significantly less liquidity than cheaper positions. That said, the iconic nature of this card and the promise that it will never be reprinted make it a solid place to park some money- just don't make that money your rent money. In particular, if you've been wanting the judge promo for your Commander deck, now is the time to buy. It's definitely not going down.

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Ryan Overturf

Ryan has been playing Magic since Legions and playing competitively since Lorwyn. While he fancies himself a Legacy specialist, you'll always find him with strong opinions on every constructed format.

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