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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
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.
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.
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.
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.
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...
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









Affinity 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.
Some 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.
Fast 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.
However, 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.
addition 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.
With 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.
Blue 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.


decklists. 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
Numbers 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.
and 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.
fluctuating 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
I 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.
Eldrazi will average 25%-30% of the events.
Abzan Company, Abzan Chord, and Blue Moon will excel.




Looking at the other non-Eldrazi we see similar subtle adaptations.
Similarly, 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...
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.
Taking 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.
As 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