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M15 Spoiler – 06/25/14 – Not What We Expected

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This newest batch is...well it's not what I expected.

Kird Chieftain

kird chieftain

"Kird Ape is back with new art!" - the internet, earlier

Not exactly, folks. Kird Chieftain is a brand new card with the Kird Ape's essence but without his playability. This is a sick Hill Giant for limited and that's about all. What an inauspicious start to the day.

Dauntless River Marshall

dauntless rivermarshal

Remember Arctic Aven? Well enjoy another year of UW ruling draft.

This card is bananas.

Jorubai Murk Lurker

jorubai murklurker

Solid

Nightfire Giant

night fire giant

Seems OK, probably the second-weakest of the cycle

Sunblade Elf

sunbladeelf

Yep. This actually has a chance of seeing contructed play. Me likey.

Ajani  the Steadfast

ajani the steadfast

"Please put a new Ajani in literally every set" - no one

If this could protect itself it would be amazing. As it stands, I'm not sure how to evaluate it. Thankfully, we don't have to know how to evaluate core set planeswalkers. You basically have to pack them. Casuals will open them at the prerelease, not you. They won't trade them. No one in the shop has them for trade because they paid full retail to get them because no one will buy packs of core set. You will buy a box and not get any planeswalkers because you will get 2 copies of Soul of Ravnica and 2 copies of Aggressive Mining instead. The presale price will seem too high, but the cards will not go down by much unless the planeswalker sucks. I am not sure this sucks. That emblem is very good and Elspeth can protect this. Interestingly enough, Ajani's first ability is worded so that you can give the bonus to nothing.

Soul of Theros

soul of theros

This will make games of limited miserable. A 6/6 Vigilance is decent, it surviving to activate its ability is savage. Killing it won't save you. Be afraid.

This still isn't fit to sniff Sun Titan's farts though.

Nissa, Worldwaker

nissa worldwaker

Yep. Yep.

Yep yep yep yep.

Yes.

This guy.

It's like Koth and Garruk contributed parts of their planeswalker spark to a planeswalker baby birthed by original Nissa and she grew up a bit because at first she was like those girls who are really into horses and have a horsey Trapper Keeper and horsey sweaters and they rode horseys every weekend only she was like that for elves but she matured a bit and forgot all about elves and at her first kegger in college she got sparkseminated by two dudes and had a baby that was also herself.

With me so far?

The only way this could be better is if her second ability said "Untap up to four target lands" so you could ruin EDH. Even Modern has that mono-green devotion deck where you use Garruk Wildspeaker to untap a forest with an enchantment on it and your Nykthos, Shrine to Nyx thus winning the internet.

This card protects itself, the bonus it grants to lands is permanent unlike with Koth and her ultimate can win the game. I don't preorder planeswalkers, especially at $25. This being in a core set may make it a decent bargain if you need these to play with right away. Again, evaluating core set planeswalkers for financial value is a craps shoot, but this seems powerful and popular. Pack these.

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Jason Alt

Jason Alt is a value trader and writer. He is Quiet Speculation's self-appointed web content archivist and co-captain of the interdepartmental dodgeball team. He enjoys craft microbrews and doing things ironically. You may have seen him at magic events; he wears black t-shirts and has a beard and a backpack so he's pretty easy to spot. You can hear him as co-host on the Brainstorm Brewery podcast or catch his articles on Gatheringmagic.com. He is also the Community Manager at BrainstormBrewery.com and writes the odd article there, too. Follow him on Twitter @JasonEAlt unless you don't like having your mind blown.

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Posted in Free, M15Tagged , , , , , , , 6 Comments on M15 Spoiler – 06/25/14 – Not What We Expected

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Insider: Rotation Targets from Return to Ravnica

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Welcome back, readers and speculators!

Today's article might be a bit premature, but preparation is definitely something that is perfectly fine when done in advance. So let's fast forward to September 26 2014. Khans of Tarkir has officially released and the local competitive players want to unload all the previous Standard tournament staples they had to hold onto to keep playing competitively, despite watching the value of their cards plummet the last two months.

There are some cards that I don't expect to dip much in value, those whose value was heavily propped up by eternal and casual formats rather than Standard. The best example from Ravnica block is Deathrite Shaman. His value was almost exclusively due to his dominance in Legacy, and for a while Modern. Thus I don't expect any drop in value with rotation.

It's important to note that when I describe a card I'm targeting and assign it a value, that's the cash value I'd buy them at.

Targets

[cardimage cardname="Overgrown Tomb"][cardimage cardname="Steam Vents"][cardimage cardname="Hallowed Fountain"][cardimage cardname="Temple Garden"][cardimage cardname="Blood Crypt"]

The Shocklands

While we writers have been harping on these guys for a while now they have still had a pretty solid price increase in the past year. Last time this year I was buying Steam Vents and Blood Crypt on eBay for $24 a playset shipped, Overgrown Tombs and Hallowed Fountains were $26 a playset, and I simply traded for Temple Gardens (as they were more like $34 a playset when everyone was playing G/W or Naya Aggro).

Now Steam Vents is the only one on the list which has seen minimal Standard play and thus its price is heavily propped up thanks to it being the #1 shockland of Modern (played in UWr Control, Splinter Twin decks, Counter Burn, two major combo decks, etc).

Still, there are a lot of shocklands in the marketplace and there's a strong possibility that players won't keep all 40 shocks (i.e. a playset of each) for Modern but rather only those relevant to the deck they are playing. When you look over most Modern decks, you'll notice they don't even run the full playset of shocks that they can.

The reason is simple--Modern is still a fast enough format that taking lots of extra damage from your mana base is not always a luxury you can afford. You'll often see two-of's for each relevant shock (and in three-color decks likely a one-of for the "weaker" color combination) and these will be complimented by lots of fetchlands (typically eight or more).

That being the case, WoTC will continue to support Modern and demand for the staples (of which the land base is likely the biggest one) will grow. The recent printing will keep the prices down for a while, but within the next couple of years I'd expect them all to be $20+ again (barring another reprint of course), which is a perfectly reasonable price point for WoTC. It's only when these lands break $35-40 that I think WoTC will reprint them again, as this last printing added quite a lot to supply.

We'd expect the price of non-Steam Vents to drop a little bit, however it is important to note that the RTR are the main colors of a lot of different archetypes (Steam Vents covers Twin and Storm, Hallowed Fountain UWx Control variants, Overgrown Tomb BGx variants (Jund or Junk) with Blood Crypt or Temple Garden being minor color combinations or more often paired with one of the major ones).

I am less inclined to target either Blood Crypt or Temple Garden for this reason. I will personally be targeting the lands at these prices:

  1. Steam Vents - $6.00
  2. Overgrown Tomb - $4.50
  3. Hallowed Fountain - $4
  4. Temple Garden - $2.5
  5. Blood Crypt - $2

These prices reflect what I expect many of the stores will be paying at rotation.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Abrupt Decay

Abrupt Decay

Next up is an Eternal all-star. While it gets a lot of face time on camera in Legacy events (often in BUG Delver or Jund) it is also heavily played in Standard. I expect it to maintain a good portion of its price come rotation, but it will drop due to the fact that so much demand does come from Standard use. I will be targeting them at around $5 each.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Sphinx's Revelation

Sphinx's Revelation

This one shows up as one- to two-of's in a lot of the UWx control decks as well as an occasional one-of in the UWR Kiki/Resto deck sideboards. The ability is powerful, but this one is likely to tank (similar to Bonfire of the Damned) at rotation. I expect these to buylist for $1-2 and that's what I'd pick them up at (and in moderation, as the demand will exist but it won't be huge).

There was an error retrieving a chart for Vraska the Unseen

Vraska the Unseen

As several of my fellow writers have stated, casuals absolutely adore planeswalkers and this one has a unique, flavorful ultimate and a useful minus ability. The fact that she was printed in the duel deck has already tanked her price pretty hard and I expect to be able to buy these at around $1 pretty easily.

She's unlikely to see another reprint due to her being a dual-colored planeswalker that already was reprinted in the duel deck and she almost always belongs in any GBx EDH deck if only because she's a pseudo Vindicate that can stick around if protected. I will be happy to pick up a bunch of her at $1.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Angel of Serenity

Angel of Serenity

Mythic and an angel that provides a form of card advantage (either by acting as three pseudo-removal spells or giving you back three creatures from your yard should she die). She's mono-colored (though a bit demanding on the colored mana) so she can fit in a larger number of EDH decks. The artwork is gorgeous. I will definitely pick up regular copies around $0.5 and I'll heavily target foils at $3-4.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Counterflux

Counterflux

I've gotten quite a few of these as bulk rares and their price will likely drop to maybe $0.5 post-rotation (buylist likely around $0.15). Being a regular rare from RTR there are a lot of these, but they are very good sideboard cards in Modern and I always pull them out from the bulk and set them aside. So I'll be happy to pick these guys up for the $0.15 I expect they'll buylist at.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Cyclonic Rift

Cyclonic Rift

This one is the one I think will have a strong shot at being a $5 card...if it can stay off the ban-wagon in EDH. It serves as a universal answer to any nonland for blue with the upside of half upheavaling everyone else while leaving your board state intact. I've seen a lot of EDH games won when someone goes EoT overload Cyclonic Rift and then combos off.

It's because of that exact situation that has me concerned. This is the exact type of card I can see getting banned (our local player group already frowns upon anyone who actually overloads it) because of how far it can set your opponents back all the while having no negative affect on your own board state.

Having looked over my pile of 68 Sylvan Primordials the other day I'm weary of targeting the cards that seem "too good" for EDH, though I wouldn't say no to these at $0.75. Again I would pick these up in moderation.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Dreadbore

Dreadbore

B/R is usually not a highly desirable color combination on it's own, however Grixis and Jund are, and Dreadbore is a very potent piece of removal. Normally I don't play one-for-one's in EDH unless I feel I really need to or they are very efficient (Swords to Plowshares in white for instance), but the versatility to kill both creatures and planeswalkers is very useful. This card will likely not hit true "bulk status" but I do think it'll be close.

I feel it'll likely fall to $1-1.50 in trade with a buylist of around $0.5. I'd be happy to pick them up at this price, though again due to the limited archetypes that would play it I wouldn't go hog wild (maybe eight copies at most).

There was an error retrieving a chart for Loxodon Smiter

Loxodon Smiter

It's a 4/4 for three mana that can't be countered and God forbid they go turn two Liliana with this in your hand. I've been seeing a lot of Junk decks in Modern and while the creature suite they have access to is very powerful, should aggro-control decks start to become a major player in the format this card's stock will go up.

I expect the buylist price on this one to actually fall to bulk or near bulk status ($0.10-$0.15 which I'd be happy to pay and pick up probably five to six playsets easily).

There was an error retrieving a chart for Pithing Needle

Pithing Needle

This colorless catch-all has proven itself to be a solid sideboard option in both Modern and Legacy as a cheap solution to planeswalkers that can hit before they even have a chance to do anything. It can fit into any deck and its mana cost is almost as cheap as you can get. This is a card I'd be happy to pick up at $0.25 all day (which is around what I expect its highest buylist price will be at rotation).

There was an error retrieving a chart for Rest in Peace

Rest in Peace

The premium white graveyard hate in both Legacy and Modern, this guy just shuts down certain archetypes (Reanimator and Dredge among the most notorious). It also serves as an awesome way to nullify Tarmogoyfs and turn Nimble Mongeese into Gladecover Scouts. This will also likely fall into the slightly above bulk status, of which I'm happy to pick them up at $0.15-$0.2 and in decent quantities (maybe 40-50).

There was an error retrieving a chart for Supreme Verdict

Supreme Verdict

While it appears to be getting pushed to the side in Modern control decks in favor of good ol' Wrath of God (thanks to Thrun), it still serves as a powerful Legacy sideboard option. Being a buy-a-box promo (with pretty awesome artwork to be honest) means that foils prices will likely stay depressed, but I still really like this card.

I expect it'll fall to $1.25-$1.50 at rotation (given it does see a decent amount of Standard play in the U/W control decks) and I'll be happy to hoard them at this price. I don't expect this one to be reprinted anytime soon and in any format in which the glue that holds it together is a free counterspell, being uncounterable is huge.

Insider: Vintage Tournament Report with Grixis Keeper

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If you associate with other Magic players, I'm sure your social media has been flooded with anything and everything Vintage Masters.

I've been drafting the set with more or less all of my free time, and I can't express my approval enough. Outside of some cards printed at a questionable rarity, the draft format is extremely fun, and definitely skill intensive. While the draft format itself won't last forever, it does bring constructed Vintage to Magic Online, which is arguably even more exciting.

A few Minnesotans have been putting some work into getting a live Vintage scene going, and there has been a pretty dedicated crowd gathering for a weekly tournament. I've attended a few Vintage events with Storm and RUG Delver and they've been pretty fun, but I still have quite a bit to learn about the format.

Data from Vintage Daily Events is pretty awesome for hashing out the format, but so far there have been quite a few un-powered or under-powered lists cashing that really won't cut it in a world where proxies are legal. A Sharpie is considerably more affordable than a Black Lotus.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Black Lotus

With a Vintage tournament occurring this last Saturday and this slightly flawed data available, I decided to try something out based mostly on my personal experiences with the format. The Delver deck struck me as being well positioned against non-Shops decks, and the Storm deck has a pretty comparable position in the metagame, though, of the two, Delver tends to get better post-board while Storm tends to get worse.

That said, Storm's ability to win from nowhere was endearing and its game ones definitely seemed stronger to me. All that in mind, I wanted to play something that could play some back and forth Magic with access to some kind of combo win. The obvious answer was to take Keeper for a test run.

Grixis Keeper

creatures

1 Myr Battlesphere
4 Dark Confidant
2 Snapcaster Mage

spells

1 Tezzeret the Seeker
1 Dack Fayden
2 Jace, the Mind Sculptor
4 Force of Will
1 Black Lotus
1 Mana Crypt
1 Mox Ruby
1 Mox Sapphire
1 Mox Jet
1 Sol Ring
1 Sensei's Divining Top
1 Tinker
1 Time Vault
1 Voltaic Key
1 Time Walk
1 Brainstorm
1 Ponder
1 Mystical Tutor
1 Ancestral Recall
1 Preordain
3 Mental Misstep
2 Lightning Bolt
2 Mana Drain
1 Hurkyl's Recall
2 Flusterstorm
1 Yawgmoth's Will
1 Demonic Tutor
1 Vampiric Tutor
1 Merchant Scroll

lands

3 Volcanic Island
1 Library of Alexandria
1 Tolarian Academy
4 Scalding Tarn
3 Polluted Delta
1 Island
2 Underground Sea

sideboard

2 Lightning Bolt
1 Flusterstorm
4 Ingot Chewer
1 Rack and Ruin
4 Grafdigger's Cage
2 Pyroblast
1 Mountain

This is very close to Marc Lanigra's 2012 Vintage Championship winning deck, with a couple changes based on taste, a couple based on expected meta, and the inclusion of one Dack Fayden that I really wanted to try out.

I was planning on running Blightsteel Colossus until Mike Hawthorne asked how I felt about Myr Battlesphere. It's better to flip to Dark Confidant, it's surprisingly castable, and is much better at battling Steel Sabotage. Inkwell Leviathan was the other consideration, but I ultimately decided that castability was more relevant than pitching to Force of Will.

Hawthorne also tried to sell me on playing Four Color Keeper with Deahtrite Shaman and Abrupt Decay, but I liked the idea of playing the deck without Decay to see whether I wanted for it or not.

The Fighting!

Round 1 Vs. Storm (2-0)

Round one against local heartthrob Troy Thompson was something to behold. In game one, Troy resolved Timetwister, Windfall for four, and Tinker for Memory Jar, with me drawing relevant interaction off of both of the draw sevens. Had the Windfall given Troy something that just won instead of a draw seven, he'd have easily won, but my Timetwister and Memory Jar hands both contained some quality counterspells.

Our first game took nearly a half-hour, with me ultimately winning. It was harrowing, it was swingy, and it was awesome.

Game two wasn't nearly as eventful, with me countering almost all of what Troy tried to do. He did resolve Necropotence, as Flusterstorm isn't very good against enchantments. It is, however, excellent against almost everything else in Storm.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Flusterstorm

Round 2 Vs. BUG Hatebears (1-2)

This is the name that I have given to Hawthorn's BUG brew in the hopes that he'll hate it. Mike was basically playing the fairest deck in the room, with its eye on playing cards that crush the metagame. Deathrite Shaman, Dark Confidant, Snapcaster Mage, Trygon Predator, True-Name Nemesis and Vendilion Clique are all present, in addition to a slew of counter-magic, Abrupt Decay and a lot of the usual suspects.

Game one involved some early attrition with me ultimately pulling ahead due to some Ancestral Recalling. On the draw in game two I kept a relatively weak hand with Library of Alexandria, and was severely punished by a turn one Duress from Mike.

Woof.

In game three my hand was pretty strong against everything but True-Name Nemesis, so Mike thought it prudent to cast one such mighty fish. Turns out you can't Lightning Bolt that one. Justice.

Round 3 Vs. Dredge (2-1)

This match was against Scott Fielder, who wrote an excellent Dredge primer for Quiet Speculation.

Scott's definitely a master, but his mulligan to one didn't cut it in our first game. In game two I kept a fairly loose hand with Demonic Tutor, Time Walk and three lands with the plan being to Walk into Tutor for Grafdigger's Cage. I didn't have the answer to Scott's Mental Misstep and that was that.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Mental Misstep

Game three ended up being pretty awesome. I had Cage and an answer for Scott's answer, in addition to a Demonic Tutor to set up playing the Voltaic Key and Time Vault from my hand the next turn. Scott, not in the market to get comboed out, used Unmask and Cabal Therapy to leave me with just a fetchland in my hand and lands and a Grafdigger's Cage in play.

I drew Preordain for my turn, finding Brainstorm, which I cast and cracked my fetchland, then casting the Ponder I found, culminating in playing two Dark Confidants on the following turn. There was a two turn window where it was anyone's game, but the Bobs ran away with it pretty quickly.

Round 4 Vs. Storm (2-0)

Hawthorne and his opponent were locked for the cut to top four after this round, with the winner of my match and the match the next table over joining them. I played against a Storm variant with Burning Wish in this round. I'm not up to date with all the nuances of Vintage deck nomenclature, but I am pretty sure the deck was Burning Long.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Burning Wish

After getting Duressed in game one and losing my Force of Will, I was feeling pretty vulnerable, but my opponent just wasn't able to pull anything together before I drew back into relevant interaction and ways to win the game.

Game two involved my opponent going all in on an early Mind's Desire and being felled by my two Flusterstorms, followed by me untapping into a "lethal" Tezzeret the Seeker.

Semifinals Vs. Shops (2-0)

I knew that my opponent was on Shops and I kept an opener with Dark Confidant, Hurkyl's Recall and Force of Will, which looked like gas. The early turns involved a Force of Will on Sphere of Resistance, Dark Confidant and Hurkyl's Recall bouncing Kuldotha Forgemaster and a Phyrexian Metamorph copy of the Forgemaster before untapping and revealing Mana Drain to Bob.

A couple turns later I had a Sensei's Divining Top and a Voltaic Key while my opponent controlled a Chalice of the Void on two and played a Steel Hellkite and used the previously bounced Phyrexian Metamorph to copy it.

I used the Key-Top trick to trade up my Top, untap it in response and then tap it again to draw the Top back in addition to a fresh card, which is a very cute and sometimes relevant trick worth knowing. Going that extra card deep allowed me to replay and spin my Top into Dack Fayden, stealing one of the Hellkites and winning a game that otherwise would be difficult if not impossible.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Sensei's Divining Top

Game two involved some Ingot Chewers and Rack and Ruin, which enabled me to win pretty handily. There's really not much to report on matches against Shops. Odds are you're either casting your spells and that means that you're winning or you can't and you lose.

Finals Vs. BUG Hatebears (split)

It was tempting to try and take Mike down a peg, but I'm not generally one to refuse a split, particularly when my opponent knows a lot more about their role in the matchup than I do. Mike is pretty convinced that he has the "best deck in Vintage", which is obviously a load of nonsense, but one more match wouldn't prove anything either way anyway.

Going Forward

Overall I was very happy with the deck. Another player was playing four Dack Fayden and said that he was very happy with it, but the copy I was playing spent most of its time being pitched to Force of Will. I'd say that the value that he provides against Shops is worth continuing to play him as a singleton, but I'm definitely not looking to add a second to the maindeck.

The basic Island didn't seem very good or relevant to me, and I'd rather just have another Underground Sea. The Mountain on the sideboard makes a little more sense to me, as you want to be able to have Ingot Chewer mana the whole game in the face of Wastelands from Shops, but, in general, basics seem pretty greedy in Vintage.

The biggest flaw with the deck was blanking on Pyroclasm and just having Lightning Bolts for removal in the sideboard. Going forward I intend to cut both of the Bolts from the board in favor of at least one Toxic Deluge, possibly a Pyrocalsm and possibly a Fire/Ice, as it can be Merchant Scrolled.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Toxic Deluge

I'd like another one or two slots against Dredge in the sideboard. Specifically, I would like things that can't be Mental Missteped. Yixlid Jailer has the upside of being generally difficult to interact with, while Ravenous Trap can be Mystical Tutored up. The fact that this play telegraphs the Trap likely makes a misers copy pretty loose, and I'm currently leaning Jailer.

As far as comparing Grixis Keeper to Four Color Keeper, I intend to stick with Grixis for the time being. I definitely see the benefits of playing Abrupt Decay over Lightning Bolt, but I never found myself wishing I was a Deathrite Shaman deck. Without Deathrite, four color manabases are definitely on the rough side--particularly in a format where 15-ish lands is the norm.

I guess what I'm saying is that the Grixis build... is a keeper.

Thanks for reading.

-Ryan Overturf
@RyanOverdrive on Twitter

The (Right) Slivers are Back!

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The old joke is that if you put a $10 bill into every pack of Magic cards, players would complain about the way it was folded.

Now, I don't know the truth of this, but there is certainly a tendency for the vocal minority to be, well, vocal about issues they don't like. Last year that was Slivers. Specifically, the fact that Slivers looked different in the art than the old slivers, which basically all looked like the same angry alien bug.

Well, if you're one of the people who were really bothered by that (There are actual dozens of you, I'm sure), we've got you covered.

You asked for it. It happened. It's really important.
You asked for it. It happened. It's really important.

Here you go! Angry alien bug Slivers are back!

I'm sure this was actually a conscious decision on Wizards' part. They tried to bring back a fan favorite last year, changed the art because they also changed the core Sliver mechanic ("All Slivers") in order to conform with new design standards. It didn't go over well, to say the least. This was put right on top of the list (over, say, reprinting $100 fetchlands), and now we have the result: Angry Bugs Are Back!

By the way, this card is awesome and sure-to-be a casual favorite.

Enjoy!

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Corbin Hosler

Corbin Hosler is a journalist living in Norman, Oklahoma (also known as the hotbed of Magic). He started playing in Shadowmoor and chased the Pro Tour dream for a few years, culminating in a Star City Games Legacy Open finals appearance in 2011 before deciding to turn to trading and speculation full-time. He writes weekly at QuietSpeculation.com and biweekly for LegitMTG. He also cohosts Brainstorm Brewery, the only financial podcast on the net. He can best be reached @Chosler88 on Twitter.

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Posted in Feature, Free, M15, Predictions, Standard1 Comment on The (Right) Slivers are Back!

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Red Dead Redemption at #SCGVEGAS!

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Mountains were on top of the mountain in both tournaments in my new home town of Las Vegas, Nevada, last weekend, as Kevin Rand piloted Mono Red Aggro to a victory in the Standard Open and Bryan Camidge took Burn to the promised land. Here in the desert in late June, when temperatures regularly top 100 degrees, it's only fitting that both winners won the trophies by turning up the heat on their opposition.

rand
credit: Star City Games 2014

Tom Ross' innovative Boss Sligh took the Invitational by storm, but Kevin Rand proved that the win in Columbus for Foundry Street Denizen & Co. was no fluke. On his way to the top slot, Kevin took down B/G Devotion, Mono Black Devotion, and finally U/W Control in the finals, which are some of the most popular decks in today's Standard metagame. Even newly minted Season 3 points leader Joe Lossett, whose top 8 finish with U/W Control in the Standard Open launched him into the lead for the SCG Players' Championship automatic qualifying slot for the season, couldn't slow the Red Tide from Kevin's aggressive creature deck.

Kevin Rand's Mono Red Aggro, while similar to Tom Ross' Boss Sligh, has some key differences. Chiefly, Kevin eshewed the Dragon's Mantles, Madcap Skills, and Akroan Crusaders in favor of more creatures and a few additional burn spells:

There was an error retrieving a chart for Firefist Striker
Burning-Tree Emissary, Firefist Striker, and maindeck Searing Blood. In reality, this deck much more closely resembles Patrick Sullivan Red (minus the Mutavaults and Gore-House Chainwalkers). PSulli, the patron saint of red mages everywhere, recommended his namesake red deck for the Invitational in Atlanta that Derrick Sheets won and has been espousing its virtues ever since. I'm personally a convert, having sleeved up Firedrinker Satyr in one form or another for every Standard tournament I've played since! Jackal Pup is just as good today as it was when it was first printed fifteen years ago, it seems.

If you are looking to combat the red menace, I'd look in Temple Garden's direction. Danny Smith's tenth place G/W Aggro list is a good example of a proactive strategy that is just slightly bigger than the current red decks while still being sveldt enough to get under most control decks. Additionally, Junk Constellation seems nigh unwinnable for the red team. SCG's Brian Braun-Duin has been the biggest supporter of the strategy thus far, and with red decks on the rise it's easy to support a deck that has not only Courser of Kruphix and Sylvan Caryatid but also access to Nyx-Fleece Ram and Doomwake Giant. Oy vey.

camidge
credit: Star City Games 2014

After the flames from the Standard Open settled down a bit, the Legacy Open began... and more of the same could be seen! I fell victim to a Burn deck in round 1, and I wasn't the only one. Late into the tournament, four or five Burn decks were in contention for good finishes. Burn took not only first place, but also ninth place in the Open in Vegas! Players such as myself were not well equipt to deal with Flame Rift, Price of Progress, and good old Goblin Guide this past weekend.

In addition to Burn's big finish, it should be noted that three copies of Elves and also one Belcher made top 8, making for pretty much the minimum number of Force of Wills and Brainstorms in the playoff rounds. That's much fewer than we normally see, and might be a sign of the local metagame but could also be an omen of things to come in the coming weeks.  

There was an error retrieving a chart for Goblin Guide
Be warned: it is possible that more people than usual will be running Lava Spike, Wirewood Symbiote, and Tinder Wall in your next Legacy event! With all three veritable 'combo' decks requiring attention from sideboard slots, it's possible another type of combo like Ad Nauseum or Dredge could take the metagame by surprise thanks to the lessened attention.

And that is the main problem facing control decks like Miracles right now: the threats are too varied. Not only do you have to worry about dying on turn one or two, but you also have to contend with Death & Taxes and things like Lands! As always, I advocate an aggressive strategy. RUG Delver has been the go-to for aggression in Legacy for quite some time now, and you could do far worse than sleeving up Tarmogoyf alongside Delver of Secrets for the upcoming future.

This weekend was a triumph for kitchen table Magicians everywhere. Keep your several hundred dollar mana bases and tricky interactions!

 

Burn you.

 

Form more coverage, including video archives and decklists, visit the coverage page from SCG Vegas.

M15 Spoilers – Soul of Innistrad, Sliver Hive and Good News

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Soul Of Innistrad

soul of innistrad

This one is actually not that bad, especially compared to the rest of them. Getting milled for a ton will give you a chance to make lemonade of said lemons when you get 3 creatures back in your grip. Having a reusable way to cycle your dudes is also going to give your opponents fits, especially if you have a way to discard cards for value. Deathtouch on a 6/6 is just as superfluous as it as on Grave Titan but I'll take it. This is the only one in the cycle so far that I like.

Sliver Hive

sliver hive

Do you want to know the exact effect casual demand has on a card? Watch the price trajectory of this card. It's going to be a case study on casual demand. This card is an auto-include in Sliver EDH decks, obviously, but it could see play in 4-of casual sliver decks. This is very, very good and very, very narrow. I am really mostly excited about this card because of the information it's bound to tell us and because foils of this will be absurd. I expect the demand for the foils to be slightly understated initially, but will still likely be too high to want to buy in for cash. Expect me to give periodic updates about this card's price because I think it will be enormously instructive.

Finally, a bit of good news.

Liliana of the Veil

liliana vess

Just kidding. Vess is reprinted in M15. This is good news for two reasons.

  1. They didn't reprint Liliana of the Veil
  2. They didn't reprint Liliana of the Dark Realms

Those are both good thing. LotV would ruin Standard, and LotDR is a big bag of "Who gives a $&%?" and we don't need to have that in every core set.

Three exciting announcements to perk us up on a Tuesday. How lucky can one guy be?

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Jason Alt

Jason Alt is a value trader and writer. He is Quiet Speculation's self-appointed web content archivist and co-captain of the interdepartmental dodgeball team. He enjoys craft microbrews and doing things ironically. You may have seen him at magic events; he wears black t-shirts and has a beard and a backpack so he's pretty easy to spot. You can hear him as co-host on the Brainstorm Brewery podcast or catch his articles on Gatheringmagic.com. He is also the Community Manager at BrainstormBrewery.com and writes the odd article there, too. Follow him on Twitter @JasonEAlt unless you don't like having your mind blown.

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Insider: Geography

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I was in Dayton, Ohio. You ever been there? Yeah? You know what’s a fun thing to do there? Pack up and get the fuck outta there.

-Dave Attell, Skanks for the Memories

Why do people in California play Magic?

I realize there are nerds everywhere and nerds like nerd activities like playing video games, reading books and pretending their pillow is a woman, but how does someone in a beautiful, temperate climate waste all that nice weather inside playing cards?

Michigan gets buried in snow half the year, Nevada gets so hot the pavement on the highway melts and Utah has Mormons everywhere. The East Coast gets pummeled with more hurricanes than a Serra Angel in 1994 and got buried with so many snowstorms this winter that children in Maryland are still in school this week. Buffalo, New York gets more snow than any other city in America and when it thaws the Bills and the Sabres still suck.

It sucks to live a lot of places. It doesn't suck to live in the parts of California that aren't prone to forest fires and mudslides and earthquakes and violent crime. Are there parts of California like that? Regardless, they can go surfing and wear shorts 365 days a year and randomly encounter Paul Giamatti buying Endive at Trader Joe's and the rest of us should be jealous.

With all that, why would you play Magic? I guess it's because Magic is fun.

Those Who Don't Pack Up and Move

The American Midwest is a veritable breeding ground for Magic Professionals. Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Wisconsin and Illinois seem to produce pro players by the bushel.

I bring up  Southwest Michigan a lot because I think this region is producing future professionals at an alarming rate. First, Ray Perez Jr. broke out and has been on a tear since, smashing PTQs and GP Day Twos. Right on his heels, his former teammate from Team Perfect Storm, DeShaun Baylock set out on his meteoric rise. Recently, another West Michigan player stomped the competition in Chicago.

Jadine Klomparens was on the brink of being the first woman to win a Magic GP (can that possibly be right?) this weekend. A woman from my area not winning after making it so close was about as anticlimactic and exciting as the finals being between Mono-Black and decided by the dice roll and mulligans. Personally, if Jadine hadn't gotten there, I would have preferred it would have been by losing in Game 3 to Adrian Sullivan, but you don't always get what you want.

There are plenty more players in West Michigan poised to break out and do big things. As soon as Tristan Woodsmith is a little bit older and can travel a little more freely, he is going to do big things in Magic. He reminds me of a young Kyle Boggemes, and Kyle is a guy who can take nine months off and win a GP he played on a lark.

Speaking of Kyle Boggemes, he's part of the "old guard" in Michigan--a member of Team RIW which is an institution in the area, bringing us dozens of pros and future hall-of-famers. West Michigan is nipping at East Michigan's heels and it will be interesting to see how it all shakes up. It's good to live in this area, that's for sure.

Farther East

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Following Tomoharu Saito on social media is a good deal sometimes. This deck is no secret now that he took 12th at the GP with it, but Saito tends to post lots of decks. This is especially good when a set first comes out.

In addition to his own brewing, he posts decks that are doing well at his own shop. This is incredibly instructive when a new set has just come out and the metagame is unclear. Hey, a few sets are just about to come out, aren't they?

Also instructive is the stream of FNM from his card shop. I'll peek at it every once in a while. Some decks that do well there are "whiffs" like the U/W aggro deck with Karametra, God of Harvests but some good tech has come out of there, too.

The Japanese were weeks ahead of the rest of the world with Flinthoof Boar.dec and with Kird Ape and friends confirmed as a kind of odd, reverse Flinthoof Boar cycle in M15, I'm keeping an eye on what the Japanese are up to. I didn't buy a ton of $10 Thundermaw Hellkites because I'm prescient; I just noticed the Japanese were on it.

Saito is more than happy to let the world know what he's on and the stream of his store's FNM is not exactly a secret, but it's underwatched for how valuable it is. It airs hours and hours before American FNM, also, so don't miss it.

Peaks and Valleys

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Get these while you can. There has been real movement on these, but TCG Player is slower than shops due to the disparate number of sellers making it harder to buy out. Get your copies. Get them. It's too late to buy at the floor, but if you need these to play with, you'll only pay more if you wait.

I'm not sure how to feel about the foils, but I know we'll want the non-foils going forward, and I bought quite a few when I was shop crawling this week. I think there is real growth potential, and being up $1 in a week seems to jive with that.

Untitled

4 printings of this hasn't deterred its upward movement, and this is the second consecutive week of growth. Useful mostly in EDH, this card is very powerful and has a nice mana cost. I like trading into these, but who has these for trade? I think someone is going to say, "Screw it," and spend $300 to buy out TCG Player. I'm not advocating that because these will catch up to the Unlimited printings, which will in turn cause dealers to decide Unlimited is too cheap.

This card is never getting reprinted and isn't splashy enough for an FTV or something similar. This is just a solid EDH card that is seeing growth associated with its finite supply, real demand and unreprintability (my dictionary doesn't believe that this is a word).

I don't know how much cash I want to throw at these guys, but I think this is likely a $10 card in a year with a $15-$20 Unlimited counterpart. Don't buy too many of these and start an avalanche, but watch them. If you see these in a trade binder, I'd go for it, but I think these are mostly in display cases and 100-card decks, and that's where they live.

Conspiracy just gave us another artifact general in Muzzio, Visionary Architect, and even people who have Copy Artifact need another one. EDH decks don't get torn apart. We just buy bigger boxes for our decks. a one-of format can matter as much as a four-of format if four or five decks all want a Copy Artifact. I like these long term.

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I don't like these for cash, but I love to trade for these. People value these at about $8-$10 and I'm fine trading for them even at $10. If Food Chain can hold $20 after it went up for no reason, steady EDH demand is going to make this card go up and up.

With a new Ob Nixilis being printed, Mono-black is going to get a kick. I think cards like Contamination and No Mercy are solid picks as well. Non-mono-black decks jam this powerful enchantment as well. We've seen two weeks of growth on this guy, too, and I think it's a solid trade target.

If you want somewhere to park cash, look for cards like the ones I mentioned that may go in the same deck. Maralen of the Mornsong seems like a good place to park the new Ob Nixilis and that deck can be run a few ways. The 80-swamp combo version doesn't have a lot of opportunity, but some of the other versions have good targets.

A card I really like is Dread.

Untitled

If you look at the price of Vigor you get a good idea of the potential ceiling of Dread. I am really bullish on this guy. No Mercy is a solid gainer as well, and people undervalue Dread as much as they overvalue Guile and Hostility.

I realize that I am calling a lot of EDH cards this week, but EDH has no seasons. It has no rotation. It has no big events. These cards don't really spike based on anything other than new cards coming out and making new decks possible. There is no metagame, there is only what new decks can be built.

Stay abreast of EDH and you have lots of solid gainers. Rising tides lift all boats, and a new deck can make 99 other cards go up just by virtue of a new card coming out in Conspiracy or M15. A lot of wacky EDH stuff is moving up.

Pay special attention to stuff older than Mirrodin. There are so few copies of those cards that it takes little provocation for real, serious price spikes. Cards tend to not go down once they've gone up lately, so try to be ahead of the game and anticipate what the next big thing will be. If there is a local EDH playgroup and you can't bring yourself to play with them, at least ask them what they want to build with when the new sets come out. You can end up supplying them with cards and they can supply you with cards to target.

 

That's all for this week. I'll be back with a more substantial article next week, but until then, fill the comments section with stories about your geographical location's metagame, the name of the first woman to win a GP, cards you're targeting based on new potential Commanders in M15 or whatever you want to sound off about. Until next week.

Insider: Why Speculate When It’s Already a Staple? (Part Two)

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In last week's article, I covered the history of why picking up Modern staples while Standard-legal or immediately after rotation is a good long-term move that can allow for better trades with Standard- and Limited-only players. I also went through Return to Ravnica block cards that fit this category.

Today we’ll be covering M14 and Theros block. But first, if you haven’t read part one from last week, please do so here.

Magic 2014

Three major Modern staples are in M14:

Mutavault is a post-rotation target. Its price is driven by heavy play in Standard right now, so I would be looking to sell copies, not buy in.

Keep an eye out, though, because this has a lot of upside if its floor is low enough. It was a $40 card before the reprint, and fell all the way to $15 before it started seeing heavy play in Standard. If it dips below $15 after rotation, this will be a snap-buy. In Modern (and Legacy), it mainly sees play in Merfolk decks, but the power level and adaptability of this card will always be pertinent.

mutavault

Scavenging Ooze, on the other hand, is a great target at its current price. Seeing both Legacy and Modern play, this little two-drop is at an all-time floor and should only go up from here (although it does see some Standard play, so it may dip a little more at rotation.)

Given what happened with Innistrad staples, though, I’m guessing the community at large will be sharp enough not to let this fall much, if any, further. Trade for them all, and if you have some spec money you’d like to invest, you could do worse than putting it here.

scavengingooze

Young Pyromancer is getting more and more popular in both Modern and Legacy, but as an uncommon already over $2, the upside is limited. Still, if this isn’t printed again soon, I could see it hitting $5 before too long. I’m waiting for M15 to be fully spoiled before I trade for copies, though. A cash buy at $2 seems wrong.

Theros Block

Anger of the Gods is truly a great pickup (it’s the card I alluded to in my conclusion last week). Sitting at around $1.50, this card was one of the most-played cards at the last Modern Pro Tour. If it sees heavy play in next year’s Standard, this could pay off sooner than almost any other card I’ve mentioned in the last couple weeks.

If not, it will still pay off in the long run. I think it’s a cash buy if you can get in at $1 or less. My only concern is that it’s a rare from a large fall set, but that fact is why it’s so low right now. The ceiling is lower, but so is the floor, so I think it’s a great card to just start stockpiling away for a year or two.

angerofthegods

It’s hard to imagine a card that is more of a staple than Thoughtseize. Seeing heavy play in all kinds of decks in literally every competitive format, this card is everywhere.

Before its reprint in Theros, the original printing was closing in on $70 retail. Now at around $17 (for the Theros version), it’s hard to pinpoint where the buy-in price is. With Mono-Black Devotion running the Standard table for the last year or so, the price is certainly driven at least in part by Standard demand. But it hasn’t dropped off in Legacy or Modern, so the pull is coming from many different directions.

On one hand, Theros is not going to be drafted next year, so the floor may be whatever its price is when M15 is released. On the other hand, Standard-only players are likely to sell off a whole lot of copies when Theros rotates.

I could see this going up, down, or sideways from here, so if you have any insight on the matter, please speak up in the comments. In any case, we can expect that two to three years from now, almost any post-reprint price will look like a good buy (assuming no other reprint in that time). Trading up into copies with Standard cards doesn’t seem bad at any price.

A Little Legacy Love

Many of the cards I’ve mentioned so far are good in both Modern and Legacy, but a few seem to be specific to the older format.

The best example is Deathrite Shaman, which was good enough to earn a ban in Modern. According to MTG Goldfish, DRS is the most-played creature in all of Legacy, and for good reason—it ramps, kills opponents, and messes with clocks, all while providing maindeckable graveyard hate.

DRS

Without Modern driving demand, the upside isn’t as high as it used to be, but there’s still a long-term opportunity here.

Stoneforge Mystic, the second-most-played creature in Legacy, is also banned in Modern, and it recently jumped from its long-standing price around $10 to $25. Shaman is from a more widely-opened set, it’s true. But Mystic was printed as a two-of in an Event Deck, which mitigates that difference somewhat.

SFM

Deathrite Shaman is definitely a long-term hold, especially if it takes as long to spike as Stoneforge Mystic did. While I don’t want to tie up cash for several years, this seems like an awesome card to trade toward until the inevitable payoff. I can’t imagine it will dip much at rotation, but keep it in mind when Khans of Tarkir is the only thing on players’ minds.

Low-Priced Fringe Players

I’ll close today with three Standard cards that have made at least some impact in Legacy, but don’t really reflect that in their prices.

Eidolon of the Great Revel has been getting some buzz in the finance community because of its success in Burn decks. These aren’t the most popular or successful decks in the format, but as a good budget entry option, Burn cards will always have some demand. This can hardly be considered a staple of the deck just yet, but the outlook so far is good.

Spirit of the Labyrinth is a nice little addition to Death and Taxes. Flashing it in off of Aether Vial against an opposing Brainstorm is just back-breaking.

At $1.50 retail, it’s hard to imagine this card going much lower. With a pertinent ability and a respectable body for its cost, this will be a good hate card moving forward. It’s only a rare, but it’s from a small, unpopular set, so supply is limited to some extent.

Thespian's Stage has won some events combined with Dark Depths, but it’s also a solid casual card that can go into any Commander deck. I don’t expect this to hit Vesuva-level prices, but I’m pretty confident it will be a $5 card a year or two from now. This is one of my deeper budget specs and I’m looking forward to doubling up or better down the road a bit.

Have a Style

As I’ve related before, I prefer long-term holds to short-term specs. I don’t like to have to be on top of every spike to make a profit, so I choose cards that should increase permanently, but might take a while to do so.

Very few Standard cards fit this description, but as a Draft enthusiast, I don’t always see good Eternal cards in binders at my LGS. Slowly picking up underpriced Modern and Legacy cards while their sets are being drafted is a great way to stretch your Standard stock into something with a little bit more longevity. Just be careful with cards that are also heavily played in Standard, as there might be a better opportunity to buy in when that demand is no longer present.

Have some cards you’re slowly stockpiling for the future during their Standard tenures? Please share below!

Insider: [MTGO] Nine Months of Portfolio Management – Standard Rotation Opportunities

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For most of the MTGO players, the Standard rotation is a delicate time of the year. As I was talking about it two weeks ago, starting as soon as April, prices of older Standard sets enter a free fall period that will last until the following fall and the release of the first set of the new block.

During this time, players have to make a choice between playing their favorite decks or selling their cards to avoid losing a significant amount tix by waiting too long before rotation occurs. Think about players with their playset of Thragtusk last year. The green beast had already lost 50% of its value in May 2013, from 15 tix to 8 tix. Do you hold it to play couple more DE? Or do you sell it because in September you would have lost another 75% of these 8 tix?

This year, this summer is Modern PTQ season and unfortunately this is not happening online. That would have definitely shifted players away from this dying Standard format. VMA release two week ago seemed to have done the job, though. Standard sets, and especially Return to Ravnica block sets, have taken another step down. As an example, here is the Gatecrash set value chart:

 

On the other side of the table speculators welcome this big decrease of prices as a good buying opportunity. Not every single card is going to be a good catch here, but starting with Mythics and then Modern/Legacy/Vintage staples, several cards were worth picking up from the Innistrad block and M14.

Most of the cards bottomed in September-October, but not all. Others were not a big deal during their one or two years in Standard and suddenly became much more valuable.

For my Nine Months of Portfolio Management project, my basket of rotating cards were all part of the Secondary Portfolio (you can it find here), which was rather small. However, it really showed me that these types of positions can be both valuable and safe investments.

Let's review here what I have done, what I missed and let's have a brief overview of the upcoming possibilities with the Return to Ravnica block and M14.

The Theory

The idea behind the speculation with rotating cards is that, by the end of the summer, with players getting rid of their soon-to-be ex-Standard cards, the supply is maximum for a demand at its lowest. Consequently, prices fall like stones and should be at their all time low. This is very true for rares, and a little less true for mythics.

Now that all the supply of the world is available and demand is rather inexistent, what is going to drive the prices up? Redemption, Modern/Legacy/Vintage, and casual (for what it's worth online). This demand starts slow and keep building up as people realize that they may finally need a playset of Birthing Pod or Restoration Angel for Modern, or that Batterskul is still a valuable card in paper MTG.

 

 

There was an error retrieving a chart for BatterSkull

As Matt Lewis discussed about on the forum, or as he wrote about it in several of his articles, mythics are the bottle neck for set redemption. And this include the junk mythics. To redeem a set, you need one card of each, including the best and the worse mythic of the set. For this reason, junk mythics are often good targets. In practice, the bottom of these junk mythics, and of mythics in general, in not that easy to catch.

Once rares have hit their lowest, Modern is likely to become the main driver for prices the following year, making every Modern playable card an easy and profitable target. Nonetheless, these rares may now behave like any other Modern staples, having high and low cycles. You may want to buy and sell accordingly, thus potentially generating profit multiple times during the year.

As I mentioned above, this theory has some exceptions, mostly mythics. Omniscience, Liliana of the Veil, Past in Flames, Griselbrand and… Avacyn, Angel of Hopes are some examples of mythics you may have wanted to target but have never really bottomed in the summer and got more expensive even after being evicted from Standard.

Others, such as Mox Opal bottomed very early in the summer only. By the release of Return to Ravnica, Mox Opal prices were already up by 50% compared to June.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Omniscience
There was an error retrieving a chart for Mox Opal

My Innistrad Picks

In these nine months, I only picked up 19 Innistrad block cards, which is a really small number since, as mentioned above, pretty much all mythics from Innistrad, Dark Ascension and Avacyn Restored could have been potential targets.

I mostly focused on Modern/Legacy playable cards here and I targeted the obvious. Snapcaster Mage, Restoration Angel and Sulfur Falls were the rares that were already obvious Modern contenders.

Thalia, guardian of Thraben and Gravecrawler had also been included in Modern, Legacy and Vintage.

Stony Silence is an atypic card. It was totally unplayed while in Standard and, if it had made some appearance in Modern/Vintage sideboard list, the supply would be overcome by demand. However, once Innistrad rotated out of Standard, Stony Silence gained momentum and is now part of many Modern sideboard lists. This white version of Null Rod is now flirting in the 0.5-1 tix range, a rather strong increase for a total junk rare until about a year ago.

 

Even though Grafdigger's Cage mostly maintained a price above 1 tix during its Standard era, this card is also a unique sideboard card for all decks across multiple formats. This was a good pick post rotation and I expect the cage to keep rising again and again. Available as low as 0.5 tix back in September and considering the upside the investment was a steal. Expect a decent rise soon as Vintage is now live on MTGO.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Grafdigger's Cage

I also picked up several mythics from Innistrad and Dark Ascension that I though would not only gain value because of redemption but also because they might have a role to play in Modern. Results were a little bit disappointing. Olivia Voldaren, Garruk Relentless and Huntmaster of the Fells finished with some loss. Only Falkenrath Aristocrat and Geist of Saint Traft yielded some profit. They clearly took a hit with the ban of Deathrite Shaman and the decrease in popularity of Jund in Modern, even though they were marginal players in the deck. All of them are now back to pretty low prices and could constitute good targets for the long run.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Olivia Voldaren
There was an error retrieving a chart for Huntmaster of the Fells

Third set mythics + redemption + good cards = decent and easy profit. This equation holds once again here. My five picks form Avacyn Restored generated moderate to great profit.

Among them, Craterhoof Behemoth was the best by far. It had spiked hard in April and August 2013, following by a big fall around Theros release to reach  its anticipated lowest due to rotation. It didn't take long before Travis Woo and others used devotion, Nykthos, Shrine to Nyx and Genesis Wave to give another spike to the Behemoth.

A rather unusual investment on was Griselbrand. Not that investing in this big demon is odd, but my timing was kind of strange. It is one of the mythics that has risen non-stop since its release, not even bottoming when time of rotation came. Griselbrand is also one of these cards that demonstrates the most of its power in non-Standard formats where you can cheat it into play as early as turn one. I decided to invest in it at, back in the day, the top of its shape, at 30 tix. Clearly a good move would have been to invest in it when it was around 15 tix in September. But hey, as long as the reasoning is good, it's never too late to make profit, right?

 

With a closer look you'll realize that all Avacyn Restored mythics, to a different degree, were more expensive this spring than around Theros release events when they rotated out of Standard.

Mythics from the third set should all be on your radar the next two months, although Dragon's Maze doesn't pretend to have the quality of mythics as Avacyn Restored had.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Griselbrand

Other Opportunities

As stated earlier, pretty much all mythics are good pick up when rotation comes, particularly because the redemption of sets becomes a major prices driver. Almost all the mythics from the Innistrad block gained about 50% of value between September 2013 and March 2014--a comfortable profit.

More surprising is the price trajectory of some Dark Ascension mythics. Would you have guessed that Mikaeus, the Unhallowed would have been four times more expensive than Huntmaster of the Fells now? And did you know that Mikaeus was, for a moment the, most expensive card of Dark Ascension?

 

In the same line of thought, what about Avacyn, Angel of Hope? A card that saw close to zero competitive play, but nonetheless constantly rose from 2 tix in June 2012 to 14 tix in June 2014. Who said casual doesn't matter on MTGO?

 

For that reason, buying a basket of several mythics is not only very likely a good bet, but also your best insurance against any losses.

As for the rares, their prices are much less affected after rotation, and redemption doesn't really impact them too much. If they are not played in any eternal format, they are likely to stay junk rares almost forever. Thragtusk is the best example of an extremely powerful card when in Standard, but barely worth anything now.

Well timed, Geralf's Messenger could have been a good investment, thanks to devotion.

Picked up low enough, the Innistrad lands were and probably still are good targets. They will likely become more valuable as time passes and are subject to Modern cycles. Buying them low could guaranty you some a moderate but safe amount of tix.

Finally, Vexing Devil would have definitely been a good target. Its price went from below 2 tix to 5 tix. I guess I underestimate its power in Red burn decks.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Vexing Devil

Ravnica: Next Rotation

I think the Ravnica block is going to have several very interesting targets once rotation hits. However, it seem like very few mythics will be able to make the cut passed Standard. Domri Rade and Voice of Resurgence are probably the two most promising mythics for Modern. On the outsiders corner, I like Worldspine Wurm, Enter the Infinite and Borborygmos Enraged, which may see some play in eternal formats.

As said before, all mythics, independent of their power in game, will retain value because of redemption. I was looking at Goatbots availability recently and I noticed that some junk mythics such as Utvara Hellkite and Necropolis Regent tend to be poorly stocked, a probable sign of people already anticipating redemption.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Utvara Hellkite

In the rare section, beside the obvious Shock Lands, Abrupt Decay and Deathrite Shaman are worth keeping an eye on. I'm not sure about anything else. Several other rares such as Detention Sphere, Loxodon Smiter, Dreadbore, Legion Loyalist, Gyre Sage and Beck // Call may have a shot, but you really want to get them at their lowest possible bottom as they may not move an inch after rotation. Some of them are already at 0.05 tix or below and are, therefore, risk free.

There was an error retrieving a chart for Abrupt Decay

The Shocks, the Decay and the Shaman have, to me, an excellent perspective in the long run. If you want to invest and sleep on it for year, these are the cards you want to invest in next September-October. You only have to keep an eye on potential reprints in Modern Masters 2 or 3.

Thank you for reading!

Sylvain Lehoux

Hints at M15’s Planeswalkers?

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We know a little about Magic 2015. Garruk and the Veil will feature prominently. Garruk may be Black as some people are expecting. Then again, maybe he'll be Green-Black. Or just Green.

Maybe we don't really know that much.

But one thing the Internet is lighting up about today is something that may hint at the Planeswalkers we will receive.

A hint at Magic 2015?
A hint at Magic 2015?

A photo gallery of sleeves, including the one above, has been released. The idea is that the art gives away the fact that Chandra, Pyromaster is returning, and it does hold some water. This also "gives away" that Liliana Vess is returning.

On the surface, it seems like a solid theory. What do you think?

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Corbin Hosler

Corbin Hosler is a journalist living in Norman, Oklahoma (also known as the hotbed of Magic). He started playing in Shadowmoor and chased the Pro Tour dream for a few years, culminating in a Star City Games Legacy Open finals appearance in 2011 before deciding to turn to trading and speculation full-time. He writes weekly at QuietSpeculation.com and biweekly for LegitMTG. He also cohosts Brainstorm Brewery, the only financial podcast on the net. He can best be reached @Chosler88 on Twitter.

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Posted in Feature, Free, M15Tagged , 1 Comment on Hints at M15’s Planeswalkers?

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Lands or Spells?

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This is a question that comes up regularly enough, but one I think is always worth addressing. This time it comes to us from user /MasterNeo27 on Reddit. The question: When slowly buying a deck, is it better to buy the expensive lands first, or the expensive spells first?

Lands or spells first?
Lands or spells first?

It's a question that doesn't have an easy answer, and most of the responses here seem to be leaning toward "it's a balance." That said, when it's one or the other for a player building a new deck, "it's a balance" doesn't really help.

So what is the right answer? Again, I'll join the "it depends" chorus, but with a qualifier. Suppose you're building, as the example in the question posed, Splinter Twin in Modern. Do you buy the fourth Scalding Tarn or the fourth Splinter Twin first?

I'll try to sum it up like this. If you're playing a focused deck like Splinter Twin that really needs the Twins to work, I would absolutely prioritize that over land. After all, adding the fourth Twin means a lot more in consistency than adding the 23rd land. Plenty of players across Magic get by in two-color decks just using basic lands. While obviously that's a little different in Modern, you need to figure out which has more of an immediate impact in your deck than any hard-or-fast rule of spells or lands. For instance, if you're running a three-color UWR deck in Modern, that fourth Arid Mesa probably means more than a second Sphinx's Revelation.

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Corbin Hosler

Corbin Hosler is a journalist living in Norman, Oklahoma (also known as the hotbed of Magic). He started playing in Shadowmoor and chased the Pro Tour dream for a few years, culminating in a Star City Games Legacy Open finals appearance in 2011 before deciding to turn to trading and speculation full-time. He writes weekly at QuietSpeculation.com and biweekly for LegitMTG. He also cohosts Brainstorm Brewery, the only financial podcast on the net. He can best be reached @Chosler88 on Twitter.

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Posted in Buylist, Feature, Finance, FreeTagged , , 5 Comments on Lands or Spells?

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M15 Spoilers – Nuttiness abounds

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Spirit Bonds

spirit bond

This seems pretty nutty in limited. I don't know that it gets you as much card advantage as, say, Mentor of the Meek, but with no restriction on the creature's size, this is a solid addition to your deck. It will require you to play stuff behind curve, but a 1/1 flier in limited can win games, and indesctructibility is nothing to sneeze at. Solid role-player, probably not financially significant unless Standard really pumps its brakes.

Shield of the Avatar

shield of the avatar

This is a bad Darksteel Plate in EDH and standard doesn't want equipment that doesn't boost a creature's power. A "win more" card if ever I saw one.

Yisan, the Wanderer Bard

yisan the wanderer bard

Vorel of the Hull Clade EDH players might want this guy for finding creatures with odd-numbered casting costs, but this is really slow. Despite putting the card into play, this guy isn't a tenth as good as Fauna Shaman and I don't think it's worth it if you're going to get clocked by our next card.

Ob Nixilis, Unshackled

obnixilis unshackled

Yep. Nuts to your Wanderer Bard.

I really like this guy in a modern deck like Brad Nelson used to run with the old Ob Nixilis. Getting this guy on turn 3 is very good. It turns your Path to Exile into a totally unfair removal spell, shuts off their fetches and Birthing Pod and generally makes life miserable for a lot of decks in Modern. I could see this as a sideboard card in Legacy Reanimator and I imagine foils of this will really be nutty due to EDH demand. He's a demon, he's a legend and he has two powerful abilities and 2 good keyword abilities. Why isn't this guy mythic? He would be the second coming of Griselbrand if he were.

Goblin Kaboomist

goblin kaboomist

Meh

Aggressive Mining

aggressive mining

This is the card red wants to have in play late in a game of Limited. Is this the card red wants to draw early or even devote a spot to?

The real question is whether Standard decks will want this enough for it to matter financially. The only constructed deck I could see wanting this also contains four copies of Seismic Assault, which could be saucy. I can't predict the future, but I'm not betting on this being worth above bulk.

Master of Predicaments

master of predicaments

This is a really saucy card. It allows your opponent to make mistakes. It is slightly game-able, though; if I want to keep big stuff off of the board, I will always guess that the mana cost is above 4 so if they drew something big, they can't play it. Most of the time, though, you guess the mana cost is low because lands put the odds heavily in your favor. This is one of the coolest sphinxes I have seen, but that probably isn't enough to make it worth more than a buck or two.

Soul of Shandalar

soul of shandalar

Someone on the Wizards website compared these to the Titans cycle and I threw up a little.

Return to the Ranks

return to theranks

Now THIS I can get behind. This is a much worse Immortal Servitude, true, but Immortal Servitude is leaving us soon. The more I look at this card, the less I like it. It didn't even take a paragraph for me to be disappointed. Immortal Servitude never got above $1.50. Can this possibly be worth more than that?

Soul of New Phyrexia

soul of new phyrexia

So we have 6 chances to whiff on a mythic instead of 5?

Jalira, Master Polymorphist

master polymorphist

This is a card we've discussed before but now we know the full text of the card. I think this is fine. I could see building EDH around it, or upgrading creatures in a creature-light Limited deck. Popping this in response to an unfavorable trade or removal spell in Limited is going to be pretty good. EDH demand should keep this above bulk, but I think foils are safer. What is it with the terrible "soul" cycle at Mythic and good, Legendary creatures at regular rare? This is a bad EV financial set so far unless those souls end up more popular with casuals than the Titans did - they'll have a lot of slack to pick up because competitive players are already wrinkling their noses.

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Jason Alt

Jason Alt is a value trader and writer. He is Quiet Speculation's self-appointed web content archivist and co-captain of the interdepartmental dodgeball team. He enjoys craft microbrews and doing things ironically. You may have seen him at magic events; he wears black t-shirts and has a beard and a backpack so he's pretty easy to spot. You can hear him as co-host on the Brainstorm Brewery podcast or catch his articles on Gatheringmagic.com. He is also the Community Manager at BrainstormBrewery.com and writes the odd article there, too. Follow him on Twitter @JasonEAlt unless you don't like having your mind blown.

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Insider Video: Zwischenzug Plays Tarmo-Twin and a VMA Booster Pack Contest

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The contest for a VMA booster is pretty simple. After you've watched the videos, leave a comment, and I'll pick one I like to win the pack.

You could suggest a change to the deck list, a different sideboarding strategy, a different line of play, make a pun, or do none of those things. While I always like it when people say nice things about me, it's unlikely to help your chances. Good luck!

The Deck, and How To Play It

Untitled Deck

Creatures

4 Tarmogoyf
4 Snapcaster Mage
2 Vendilion Clique
2 Pestermite
4 Deceiver Exarch

Other

2 Gitaxian Probe
1 Flame Slash
4 Serum Visions
4 Lightning Bolt
4 Remand
1 Electrolyze
4 Splinter Twin
2 Cryptic Command

Lands

4 Misty Rainforest
4 Scalding Tarn
3 Steam Vents
1 Breeding Pool
1 Stomping Ground
2 Island
1 Mountain
1 Forest
3 Sulfur Falls
1 Tectonic Edge
1 Desolate Lighthouse

Sideboard

1 Counterflux
2 Ancient Grudge
1 Dismember
1 Dispel
1 Negate
1 Engineered Explosives
1 Sword of Feast and Famine
3 Molten Rain
2 Anger of the Gods
1 Batterskull
1 Threads of Disloyalty


Round 1

There was an error retrieving a chart for Splinter Twin

Round 2

There was an error retrieving a chart for Tarmogoyf

Round 3

There was an error retrieving a chart for Steam Vents

Round 4

There was an error retrieving a chart for Snapcaster Mage

I'm going on a family vacation this week so I won't be able to respond to any comments in a timely fashion, but I look forward to what you have to say.

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