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Exclusive Previews: The Booze Cube 2.0

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Editor's Note: Ā The Booze Cube is a custom set of cards that exists to turn our favorite card game into a drinking game. Ā None of these are in any way endorsed by WotC, Hasbro, or your parents. Ā Please follow whatever alcohol-related laws and rules your house, city, state or country may have. Ā And for pity's sake, call a cab. Ā No one walks, let alone drives, away from Booze Cube.

To get a sense of just what goes down when the Booze Cube shows up, check out Mark Hinsz' writeup.

You should also followĀ @TheBoozeCube on TwitterĀ & Facebook.

Release Date: Ā 3/1/2014

Kelly Reid

Founder & Product Manager

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Posted in Cube, Free2 Comments on Exclusive Previews: The Booze Cube 2.0

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Modern Deck Primer: Playing and Sideboarding Melira-Pod

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Hello everyone! Today we will take an extensive look into the Modern Melira Pod combo deck. This article will provide valuable information to anyone relatively unfamiliar with the Modern format, or thinking about picking up the deck for themselves. Modern is a dynamic format with a ton of different decks capable of winning a tournament, and the recent Banned and Restricted update has only increased the diversity of the field. In spite of this, Birthing Pod strategies are just as popular as ever thanks to the resurgence of hyper-aggressive Zoo decks that build a game plan around the now-unbanned Wild Nacatl.

At its core, Melira Pod is a creature-based combo deck. It generates value by utilizing creatures with powerful abilities that trigger when it either enters or leaves the battlefield (ETB and LTB). We want to flood the board with creatures that our opponents cannot easily kill and end the game with one of a few infinite combos built into the deck. The deck is named after Birthing Pod, a card that allows us to unlock all of the potential value from creatures like Voice of Resurgence, Kitchen Finks and Eternal Witness. More importantly, it is crucial in finding our combo pieces to generate infinite life gain and/or infinite damage. This deck's main advantage is its ability to search up many singleton creatures that hose many opposing decks. While other strategies will need to include 2, 3 or 4 of a "hate" card in the sideboard, Melira Pod can include a single copy in the main deck if necessary.

Here is a sample deck list, though I encourage players to play with and tune the list as the format progresses. The Pod engine is versatile and powerful so this deck can adapt quickly to changes in the Modern metagame. For another Melira Pod list, check out Conley Woods' Pro Tour: BotG deck which uses Knight of the Reliquary as a sort of "Birthing Pod for Lands".

Untitled Deck

Creatures

4 Birds of Paradise
3 Noble Hierarch
2 Wall of Roots
2 Voice of Resurgence
4 Kitchen Finks

Singleton Pod Targets

1 Viscera Seer
1 Scavenging Ooze
1 Spellskite
1 Melira, Sylvok Outcast
1 Qasali Pridemage
1 Linvala, Keeper of Silence
1 Phyrexian Metemorph
1 Eternal Witness
1 Orzhov Pontiff
1 Reveillark
1 Archangel of Thune
1 Spike Feeder
1 Cartel Aristocrat

Spells

2 Abrupt Decay
3 Chord of Calling
4 Birthing Pod

Lands

4 Verdant Catacombs
3 Marsh Flats
3 Misty Rainforest
2 overgrown Tomb
1 Temple Garden
1 Godless Shrine
3 Gavony Township
3 Forest
1 Swamp
2 Plains

Sideboard

1 Burrenton Forge-Tender
4 Thoughtseize
1 Aven Mindcensor
1 Path to Exile
1 Sin Collector
1 Harmonic Sliver
1 Kataki, War's Wage
1 Thrun, the Last Troll
1 Sigarda, Host of Herons
1 Ethersworn Canonist
1 Obstinate Baloth
1 Shriekmaw

The Infinite Combos

A note about infinite combos: if a player is able to execute a combo an unlimited number of times without interruption, as described below, they do not need to perform the individual steps each time. They simply execute the combo and declare how many times they wish to repeat it. Just pick a number, but make sure's it's high.

The Pieces: Viscera Seer or Cartel Aristocrat, Melira, Sylvok Outcast and either Kitchen Finks or Murderous Redcap.
What You Get: Infinite life or infinite damage.
How It Works: When a creature with Persist dies, it returns to the battlefield with a -1/-1 counter if it did not already have a -1/-1 counter on it. Normally, Persist creatures come back exactly once but, because we have Melira in play, none of our creatures can receive -1/-1 counters. Persist does not check to see if the -1/-1 counter is successfully placed, only if it existed when the creature died. Thus, our creature returns to play and its ETB effect triggers. With a way to repeatedly sacrifice our own creatures, we can recur this loop and gain infinite life with Kitchen Finks or do infinite damage with Murderous Redcap. GG!

The Pieces: Archangel of Thune and Spike Feeder.
What You Get: Infinite life and infinite +1/+1 counters on your creatures.
How It Works: This combo is used less often because the individual cards are not very good by themselves. Remove a counter from Spike Feeder to gain 2 life, which will trigger the Archangel, which will then replace the counter removed from Spike Feeder. Proceed to gain a million life and have a million +1/+1 counters on all of your creatures (except Spike Feeder). You still have to win with damage but you'll have all the time in the world to do so.

The Pieces: Viscera Seer or Cartel Aristocrat, Murderous Redcap, Phyrexian Metamorph, Reveillark
What You Get: Infinite damage.
How It Works: This combo is used less often, but is worth knowing about if your Melira ever gets exiled or you are limited in creatures to feed into Birthing Pod. Fisrt, Phyrexian Metamorph must be copying Reveillark. Sacrifice Metamorph to either the Seer or the Aristocrat to trigger Reveillark's LTB effect. Since Metamorph is in the graveyard when the trigger is put onto the stack and has a power of 0 when in the graveyard, it is a legal target and returns to the battlefield. At this point, copy Murderous Redcap to trigger its ETB effect, doing 2 damage to the opponent. Since Redcap ( and thus, Metamorph) has Persist, sacrifice the Metamorph again. The Persist trigger will resolve and Metamorph will ETB again, this time copying Reveillark. In short, you are just alternating between copying Reveillark and Murderous Redcap each time the Metamorph comes into play. Note this combo only works with Murderous Redcap and not Kitchen Finks, as the little ouphe cannot be targeted by Reveillark’s ability because it has a power of 3.

Non-Combo Card Choices

4 Birds of Paradise
3 Noble Hierarch

These creatures allow us to play our more expensive spells earlier in the game. We get extra value from Podding them away into larger threats as the game goes on and extra mana becomes less relevant. They are also surprise attackers when we need to get there with a Gavony Township. Noble Hierarch is a bit of a downgrade from Deathrite Shaman, but not having to play against opposing Deathrite Shaman makes this trade-off well worth it.

2 Wall of Roots

This card got much better with the unbanning of Wild Nacatl and generates an extra mana when convoking Chord of Calling. We can Pod into him to generate green mana right away, which is effective against Blood Moon, which otherwise demolishes our mana base.

4 Birthing Pod

This is the best card in the deck, and probably in the whole format. Generating incredible amounts of value with the creatures we play while getting whatever utility card we happen to need at the moment is what makes this deck a fierce competitor. I would not recommend cutting down on this card, no matter how prevalent Wild Nacatl becomes.

3 Chord of Calling

With Green Sun's Zenith not coming off the ban list anytime soon, we are forced to play this instead. It can be quite obvious we have this card in our hand when we pass the turn without attacking with some of our creatures, but it gets the job done. Fetching out a Spellskite at instant speed in response to a Splinter Twin being cast is a pretty good feeling. Auras are targeted spells, which means Spellskite can change the target of Splinter Twin.

Combo Pieces

4 Kitchen Finks
2 Murderous Redcap
1 Viscera Seer
1 Melira, Sylvok Outcast
1 Cartel Aristocrat

These are the essential combo pieces. We only play one copy of Viscera Seer and Melira because those cards don’t really do a whole lot outside of our combo. Cartel Aristocrat is simply there as a 2 CMC sacrifice enabler we can Pod into from Birds of Paradise or Noble Hierarch. The 4-2 split between Finks and Redcap exists because Kitchen Finks is just the better card. Coming down a turn earlier, keeping us alive, and actually trading with Wild Nacatl in combat give it the edge over Redcap. Gaining infinite life is usually enough to win the game against most opponents, so Murderous Redcap is basically Kitchen Finks #5 and #6 for enabling our combo.

1 Voice of Resurgence

Voice is not quite as powerful as it used to be since the printing of Anger of the Gods, but it is fine as a one-of. Discouraging the opponent from playing removal on our turn allows us to operate more freely, and sacrificing Voice to Aristocrat or Seer allows us to attack for large chunks of damage when timed properly.

1 Scavenging Ooze

Gets pretty big when the opponent is killing all our stuff. Being able to search up graveyard disruption is quite useful and I have seen him team up with Archangel of Thune to take down some Friday Night Magic standard tournaments. He's versatile, cheap and efficient.

1 Spellskite

Spellskite is important for protecting our combo from Lightning Bolt and other pesky removal spells. We will randomly win games against Splinter Twin, Boggled Enchantments, and Infect merely by having him in play. Also passes the four toughness test against Anger of the Gods and Wild Nacatl.

1 Qasali Pridemage

I’m pretty sure the Bill Nye/ Ken Ham debate was on whether we want Qasali Pridemage or Harmonic Sliver in this slot. I went with Pridemage here. Sliver leaves behind a body we can feed to Birthing Pod, but chances are if Pod is in play we are already winning. Pridemage is better at getting the opponent dead, and we can play it early, beat down for a while, then sacrifice it (using colorless mana) it when we need instead of holding it in our hand; highly relevant against Blood Moon.

2 Abrupt Decay

I used to go with Thoughtseize here. That is a perfectly fine choice but Abrupt Decay is just a better draw off the top of the deck in the late game, and in a lot of games we are reliant on good top decks.

1 Orzhov Pontiff

This is likely the most confusing card you have ever read. We can activate his trigger twice in the same turn by playing him, sacrificing him, then killing whatever creature you haunt with him.

1 Linvala, Keeper of Silence

This is the trump card in mirror matches. He stops mana dorks, creatures enchanted with Splinter Twin, Arcbound Ravager, and has that ever-important 4 toughness.

3 Gavony Township

We often win the game with this card because it resets our Persist creatures by canceling out the -1/-1 counter. When a creature has both a -1/-1 and +1/+1 counter on it, state-based effects remove them both simultaneously; they do not remain on the creature together. , Gavony Township turns our mana dorks into threats in the late game.

3 Misty Rainforest , 3 Marsh Flats, 4 Verdant Catacombs

It might feel strange playing so many fetches without Deathrite Shaman and with Zoo running around, but we are playing the appropriate number of basics to cast our spells. Thinning our deck of lands is good against removal-heavy decks since we will want to maximize the chances of drawing threats in a long game that relies on top-decking.

Notable Exclusions

Knight of the Reliquary: Conley Woods' addition of Knight was pretty interesting. I just don’t think there are enough utility lands to get real value out of this. We would rather play something we can Pod away happily, though we might want this just to fetch Gavony Township. He also gets huge with heavy usage of fetch lands.

Thalia, Guardian of Thraben: She sees play in some sideboards but the only matchup you want it against is Storm and they can combo through it with Pyromancer Ascension. Tacking on an additional 1 colorless mana cost to whatever spell kills her is rarely worth it.

Fauna Shaman: This card is not as good here as it is in the Kiki Pod list. We want to take advantage of the ETB/LTB effects on all of our creatures and she has neither. Also, she dies to everything.

Avalanche Riders: This card is difficult to cast now that we have lost Deathrite Shaman. The Tron deck has plummeted in numbers since the unbanning of Nacatl, so it is not nearly as important to be able to attack lands.

Sideboarding Guide

Zoo

In: 1 Burrenton Forge-Tender, 1 Obstinate Baloth, 1 Path to Exile, 1 Thrun, the Last Troll, 1 Sigarda, Host of Herons, 1 Shriekmaw.
Out: 1 Cartel Aristocrat, 1 Phyrexian Metamorph, 1 Orzhov Pontiff, 1 Chord of Calling, 1 Ranger of Eos, 1 Birthing Pod.

We want to come out fast and play Kitchen Finks. Their best cards against us are Ghor-Clan Rampager and path to exile. Be conservative with your life total here. Cutting a Pod is fine to preserve your life.

Splinter Twin

In: 2 Thoughtseize, 1 Sin Collector, 1 Thrun, the Last Troll, 1 Path to Exile, 1 Sigarda, Host of Herons.
Out: 1 Scavenging Ooze, 1 Archangel of Thune, 1 Spike Feeder, 1 Murderous Redcap, 2 Kitchen Finks.

Pro Tour: BotG introduced some innovative new decklists for this archetype, so you will have to use your own judgement when deciding what to take out. Linvala and Spellskite do pretty good work against the combo.

Melira Pod (mirror)

In: 1 Path to Exile, 1 Harmonic Sliver, 1 Shriekmaw.
Out: 2 Wall of Roots, 1 Viscera Seer.

With so many copies of Kitchen Finks running around, winning by dealing 20 damage is pretty difficult. The surest route to victory is to get out Linvala. Linvala in play makes it impossible for the opponent to combo or tap creatures for mana, and flying is relevant for the inevitable ground stall. Note that copying an opponents Linvala with Phyrexian Metamorph ensures it can never die to a Shriekmaw.

UWR

In: 4 Thoughtseize, 1 Sin Collector, 1 Sigarda, Host of Herons, 1 Thrun, the Last Troll
Out: 3 Chord of Calling, 2 Abrupt Decay, 1 Orzhof Pontiff, 1 Linvala, Keeper of Silence

These decks vary a lot between builds. It's possible we want Burrenton Forge-Tender if they are a more controlling build that has Anger of the Gods.

Boggled enchantments

In: 1 Harmonic Sliver
Out: 1 Phyrexian Metamorph

We don’t board much in this matchup, as we already have Spellskite to steal the enchantments. This is likely a race to see if you can combo before you die. Rancor is their best card against you, so if you can deal with that you should be able to beat down with Kitchen Finks for days.

Scapeshift

In: 4 Thoughtseize, 1 Aven Mindcensor, 1 Sin Collector, 1 Thrun, the Last Troll, 1 Sigarda, Host of Herons, 1 Burrenton Forge-Tender
Out: 2 Abrupt Decay, 1 Linvala, Keeper of Silence, 1 Phyrexian Metamorph, 1 Orzhov Pontiff, 1 Scavenging Ooze, 1 Viscera Seer, 1 Murderous Redcap, 1 Kitchen Finks

You want to pick apart their hand as much as possible, since none of our creatures really do a whole lot. Keep up Chord of Calling to get Forge-Tender in response to Anger of the Gods or Firespout.

Affinity

In: 1 Path to Exile, 1 Harmonic Sliver, 1 Kataki, War's Wage, 1 Obstinate Baloth.
Out: 2 Wall of Roots, 1 Voice of Resurgence, 1 Birthing Pod

Get Kataki and Spellskite out and watch your opponent make the same face Peyton Manning did at the end of the superbowl (aka 10 minutes into the game). One thing to note is that with a Melira out, Inkmoth Nexus will still be an infect creature if it gets activated, and will deal a whopping zero points of damage to you.

A few tips and tricks

I have witnessed new players allow a Birthing Pod to activate, then attempt to ā€œrespondā€ to whatever creature was gotten as though the creature was on the stack. This isn’t how it works! Once a Pod activation or Chord of Calling resolves, that creature is in play. Your only opportunity to respond is upon the declaration of the spell or ability, and you won't know which creature your opponent will fetch.

Activating Gavony Township while a persist creature has a -1/-1 counter will cause both counters to fall off.

You can cast Chord of Calling and declare X to equal a number greater than the casting cost of the creature you are fetching because it is worded as "a creature with converted mana cost X or less". This is an effective way to bluff an opponent, but is almost never important. You should always prioritize keeping mana up to pay for a potential Mana Leak, and keeping blockers back to prevent losing needless life. Still, if you think there is a situation where this bluff will generate value at no opportunity cost, go for it.

Going forward, Melira Pod is not going away until Wizards decides they have to ban Birthing Pod (not anytime soon, I hope!). Until then I plan on squeezing as many victories out of this deck as possible. This deck just keeps getting better as more powerful creatures are printed (Archangel of Thune and Voice of Resurgence to name a few recent ones) and I would expect this trend to continue. Hopefully this article will help some of you sleeving up Birthing Pod at Grand Prix Richmond, and thanks for reading. I'll be answering questions in the comments below so please speak your mind.

Insider: The Next Level of Modern

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We’ve seen the breakout decks. Sigmund wrote a nice article on Monday breaking down the movement from the Pro Tour, and it’s pretty clear how to handle that movement at this point.

But what’s next?

Before I go any further, let’s talk about how awesome the Pro Tour was. Watching Modern on the ā€œbig screenā€ was really cool since it’s my favorite format. And while the decks that did well weren’t super exciting, I’m also not sure how representative of the format they really are.

After all, a room full of high-level pros is more likely to pick up a skill-testing deck like RWU than a room full of PTQ players, but even with the Top 8 as loaded as it was with one color combination, the field was really open. Even my pet deck, Merfolk, had three of its eight players go 6-3 or better. Not bad.

Earlier Picks

But we’ve seen the Pro Tour movement already, and I don’t need to recount it here. Instead, let’s figure out what’s coming next. First, I’ll start by briefly looking at the picks I made a week before the PT and see how they’ve done so far.

Geist of Saint Traft

Available for around $15 when I made the call, the cheapest Geists you’ll find now are now $20, and the mid price is up to $25. These are going to continue to trend upward to $30-35 in-season.

Snapcaster Mage

$21 TCGMid two weeks ago, it’s now up to $33 Mid and rising. I didn’t expect this to move so quickly, but $30-35 does seem like a real price from here on out.

Restoration Angel

$5-6 when I made the call, now climbing over $7. Going to be an easy $10 in-season.

Inkmoth Nexus

Almost $8 when I made the call, now $10 and rising. My call of $12-15 in-season looks about right.

Cavern of Souls

$17 when I talked about it, over $20 now, and I expect this to settle at around $25 in-season.

The Next Wave

Those were the ones I was most confident in, and they moved as expected. So what’s next?

Well, we can learn a lot from the decklists that did 6-3 or better.

From that, we see that Razorverge Thicket had a great weekend, as did Blackcleave Cliffs. Given current prices, the obvious play is Thicket. Really, I like all the Scars lands, but these two are far above the rest right now.

Sulfur Falls

This may be just a fluke of this tournament, but it illustrates a good point: Innistrad lands are good and played a fair amount in Modern, especially this one. $5 now, and probably not a ton of upside, but worth grabbing for sure.

Thrun, the Last Troll

I’ve talked about him before, and my feelings have only solidified having seen the Top 8. Look at those RWU decks and tell me how they handle a Thrun.

Spoilers: They don’t. I know this guy costs a million mana in Modern, but the effect is undeniable. The RWU decks aren’t even playing Supreme Verdict anymore, which means you don’t need to leave up mana for regeneration, and Wrath of God is kind of a distant memory at this point.

In short, the format seems primed for Thrun to make an impact. And, look at it this way, as Doug pointed out in the forums, what is there to bring his price down? It’s an older mythic and the downside is really low.

Gavony Township

From a card with a ton of upside to one with considerably less. Township isn’t going to become a $10 card overnight, but it saw a ton of play at the Pro Tour and has proven itself to be the most powerful of the Innistrad utility lands. This will continue to move toward $5, so grab them for dollar-rare status while you can.

Kitchen Finks

This is another slow gainer, but it’s another solid bet. It saw a ton of play at the Pro Tour and likely isn’t being reprinted any time soon since it was just in Modern Masters. I expect this to continue to climb and likely push $6-8 in-season.

Staples

I know this isn’t really a ā€œspec,ā€ but honestly stuff like Path to Exile, Celestial Colonnade, Kiki-Jiki, Mirror Breaker, Melira, Sylvok Outcast, Primeval Titan, Aether Vial and the like will all continue to rise, even if they don’t draw the headlines.

One more thing, before I go…

Duel Decks

The contents of Jace vs. Vraska have been spoiled, and the biggest news is that Remand is in it. That will bring the price down some but I don’t think it nukes it. It will probably fall from $17 to $10 or so and rebound to $12-13 in-season, based off previous cards in these decks.

The other news (outside of a few key reprints like Future Sight) is that neither Abrupt Decay nor Deathrite Shaman is in the decks.

Abrupt Decay is one that can actually see Modern play, so it’s a solid pickup, but Deathrite still has the downward pressure from the ban. The beautiful thing about both these Eternal staples is that neither sees a ton of play in Standard. That means rotation won’t decimate their prices. With that in mind, I like both as a pickup.

 

Thanks for reading,

Corbin Hosler

@Chosler88

Making It in Modern

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Good day fellow Magic players. I have been producing competitive content on the free side of this site for the past few years. As one of the few authors being brought over to premium side of the site, I will be continuing my story telling adventures with you there.

Much of my focus in writing is on the development of Standard and finding ways to attack the metagame. From time to time, usually when there is a big tournament coming up or when the PTQ season is right, it will be my privilege to bring you some Modern strategy.

There will be some set reviews as well as a smattering of tournament reports. If you PTQ or travel to Grand Prix on the east coast, you will see me grinding away and writing about it the next day. I’m excited to continue this journey with you guys over on the premium side of the site and continue my efforts to qualify for the Pro Tour all the while, bringing you the best competitive content possible.

The article for today is a bit different from my normal routine, but it’s a topic that’s been on my mind for a while now.

Lately I have spoken to a number of players who have never played Modern before. Even if you have been playing for many years, there is a chance that you have yet to experience the wild world of Modern.

Most shops focus on Standard and Draft, the majority of PTQ’s are going to be Sealed and Standard, and the big independent tournaments like Star City and TCG Player are Standard. If you are trying to get into Modern, it can seem tough when most of the available events do not support the format.

Do not forget though, every year we get one Modern PTQ season. In addition, the US has been getting at least one Modern Grand Prix every year, so if you are willing to travel some, the events are there. Wizards is pushing the format so much that over the next couple of years I think we will start seeing more opportunities to play in this eternal format.

Why Should You Play Modern?

There are a number of reasons why every player should think about making an investment in Modern. At the top of the list is deck diversity.

Wizards continues to show time and time again that they are focused on the health of this particular format. That fact is clearly evident when you look at the viable archetypes available for you to play. Take a look at this breakdown of the metagame on day one into day two of Pro Tour Born of the Gods.

Archetype Day Two # Day One #
Zoo 44 64
Twin 23 45
Melira Pod 21 33
W/U/R Flash 19 29
Hexproof Auras 18 24
Scapeshift 13 14
Affinity 12 22
Living End 12 14
Jund 10 27
Storm 9 12
Blue Moon 7 8
Kiki Pod 7 10
Merfolk 7 8
Burn 6 15
Infect 6 7
Tron 5 8
Amulet 4 5
W/U Control 3 5
Faeries 3 6
Other 22 30

 

That right there is twenty plus decks that are all competitive options for players looking for an Eternal experience. Standard will never have that type of diversity because the card pool is too small to support that many decks capable of winning at the highest levels. Modern, however, can and does consistently show results from so many of these decks.

Even when the format is shaken up and cards are banned or unbanned, the format may turn in a different direction but the majority of decks will continue to be playable. Most of the time when there is a change to the format, even more decks become reasonable choices.

One of the best parts of Modern can sometimes seem like the most daunting part to players trying to begin playing an eternal format. If you have not been playing since the original Mirrodin block, you may not be familiar with the entire card pool which can bring some anxiety.

For as large as the card pool is though, there are only so many playable cards. Take Path to Exile for example. This one-mana removal spell will be found in a variety of decks in Modern because of how efficient it is. Many cards like it see play because they are the best at what they do.

Sure, you may sit down against an opponent and have to read some of his cards, but that’s part of the fun of the format. After a while, there won’t be many cards you haven’t seen.

Eternal = Investment

There is no sugarcoating the fact that Modern will require an investment of your time and money. What is becoming more apparent to me though is that these cards will always be valuable. Sure Wizards may reprint some or all of the important cards in Modern, but that will only be a temporary reprieve from their mountainous heights.

The fact is that even though some cards may lose value, they will always be worth something because of how much they are played. It may take some time to collect all the cards needed to build your Modern deck, but once you have them, you can trust they will be playable for years to come.

Another thing to remember is that many of these Modern cards can double in price overnight. What that means is that holding onto them can prove quite profitable in the long term and most cards have room for financial growth.

Let's take a look at a couple of examples of this principle in action. The first card I will cite is Celestial Colonnade. At the beginning of last year, this highly played manland doubled in price from three to six dollars when UWR Control emerged as a viable deck option. I would expect Raging Ravine to follow this same pattern as it is becoming a four-of staple in Jund.

Amulet of Vigor is a great example of a card going from zero to semi-hero. Although it has fluctuated a bit, it started out as a bulk rare and has jumped back up to five dollars after the recent showing at the Pro Tour. There will always financial opportunities hiding in the shadows and crevasses of Modern waiting for someone to capitalize on.

Low Barrier to Entry

Despite the fact that Wizards is working hard to make Modern affordable, it will still take some start-up capital to get a deck together. Modern Masters has not necessarily brought down the price on the highly sought-after cards, but what it has done is made more copies available.

Because there are more copies floating around there, players have these cards in their trade binders and dealers have them in their cases. Now that there are more copies, you can also turn your trade binder into a Modern deck from one of the dealers.

Finally, if you want to play Modern, there are some inexpensive options like Infect, Burn, or the upcoming Event Deck.

Skill-Intensive Format

Another great reason to get involved with Modern is the fact that it will test your skills more than Standard or Draft. With such a large card pool, there are tons of unique interactions and combinations of cards that don’t come up in any other format. There are many combinations that will test your knowledge of the rules.

The main reason Modern is so skill-intensive is because you often have less time to work through a game plan. In this format, the stated goal is for players to regularly be able to win the game on turn four. The power level of so many of the cards is much higher than in Standard so if you take the wrong line of play, you won’t have long to get back on track before the game ends right before your eyes.

With all that being said, you can apply your skills to many different archetypes--whatever you like to play, there is something available.

If you are having a hard time learning some basics about the format, I would suggest you take a trip over to the Born of the Gods Pro Tour page and start watching some deck techs. There is no one better to hear about the deck from than the pros themselves who developed the specific decks. After that, stop back here to read my articles and learn more about the format.

Modern will be around for a while. Don't wait to start jumping into the format. Take your opportunity and start as soon as possible. You won't regret the decision. Once you have your Modern deck you can start attending great tournaments like Modern PTQs, Grand Prix, and my favorite, the split format invitational TCG Player 50k.

Until Next Time,

Unleash the Force!

Mike Lanigan
MtgJedi on Twitter
Jedicouncilman23@gmail.com

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Mike Lanigan

Mike Lanigan is high school math teacher by day and a shop owner by night. His tournament grinding may have slowed a little, but his love of the game has not. Mike's goal is to bring you a mix of perspectives from shop-owner insights to finance tips to metagame shifts and everything in between.

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Posted in Free, Modern, PTQ, StrategyTagged , , , 5 Comments on Making It in Modern

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On the Side(board) of the Gods

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Born of the Gods is here and it definitely brought some eyebrow raising treasures along with it. Most sets come with a mailbag full of goodies, but Born of the Gods has done us a solid favor by making our options very obvious. Almost everyone has tossed their two cents into the hat about what they think we should expect in the coming months. That’s all fine and dandy, but On the Side is all about taking those expectations and hopping two steps ahead of the competition so that you are prepared for the new weapons in your opponents' arsenals. Let’s talk about the new game changers.

The Prince…er King of Cats

The king has returned and his name is Brimaz, King of Oreskos. Sweet mamma-jamma, this guy is the king of white weenies and players have every reason to get excited. As the chase mythic of the set, people will be hard pressed to grab him and not very willing to let him go. Expect him for the duration of his term in Standard. He’s got that four toughness that traditionally makes red decks weep, at least before Mizzium Mortars.

As a result, the game might be up for mono-red aggro decks. Bile Blight and Drown in Sorrow are very likely to be 2-for-1’s and we know Mono-black Devotion is packing those bad boys already. Along with Gods Willing and Brave the Elements, Brimaz may actually be too much to handle for those decks because W/B in any form looks really good. But, the Barely Boros Burn decks look like they still have some punch and Chandra's Phoenix is actually incredibly resilient in the format right now, so Mortars away everybody.

Black kind of laughs at Brimaz. Bile Blight is too small, but Mono-Black has Doom Blade, Ultimate Price, Hero's Downfall, and Devour Flesh to deal with him. Black gets into trouble when the King gets paired with Spear of Heliod because it can overwhelm very quickly, but we’ll discuss that further when we talk updating already established decks.

What about UW Control decks? Brimaz and his tokens are just creatures. Issue the Supreme Verdict.

Decks with poor removal options will have the most significant trouble with the big cat. Gruul Midrange Aggro and Red/Green Devotion decks may lose the battle against a beefy body that keeps pumping out pressure and can double block like a champ. Once again, Mizzium Mortars seems like the best option and don’t discount Domri Rade. When it comes to creature battles, Brimaz can be dethroned if thrown in the ring 1-on-1 against Polukranos, World Eater or Stormbreath Dragon.

Mono-blue may have the toughest time dealing with Brimaz because he can race so well. Unless supported by Spear of Heliod, Frostburn Weird can block Mustafa profitably. It may also be time to bring back Wall of Frost and Triton Tactics since it seems like Gruul is on the upswing. White weenie decks have a really hard time shutting down Mono-blue’s devotion and that means a turned-on and very angry Thassa, God of the Sea. Also, don't forget about Domestication. Humans domesticated the house cat many millennia ago, so go ahead and steal yourself a kitty. In fact, don’t leave it in your sideboard. Mono-blue has room to compete again and Domestication should probably take the place of Cyclonic Rift in the main deck.

The Little Merfolk

The more I sit with Kiora, the Crashing Wave, the more I like her. She reminds me a lot of Tamiyo, the Moon Sage who shone brightly in a Tron-based metagame filled with Titans and Insectile Aberrations. I think players just need a little time to figure her out and whomever does so first may very well have a tournament trophy in their pocket.

Since Kiora is a Planeswalker, any decks that already have a game plan against them should stick with it. Detention Sphere and Hero’s Downfall both work equally well. While she may be quite effective against Mono-black, against control mirrors she may only be a source of card draw and land drops. These decks may be content to lean on the -1 ability to generate a long advantage, and using a valuable Detention Sphere might actually play directly into their game plan.

So, what about decks that don’t have nice and easy "Kill Target Planeswalker" cards in their deck? Well, Tamiyo lost relevance during the blitz era of the last Standard rotation. Naya Blitz, Gruul Rush, and Jund Aggro were too fast and had too many threats for her to manage and so she was gone. That seems to be the same strategy here. While it may be harder than ever to play blitz aggro, a well placed haste creature could very well be strong enough to get in and kill her outright. Remember, she enters at only two loyalty.

Mono-blue is the only Tier 1 deck that may need some extra ammo out of the sideboard against her. They’re already equipped with Gainsay and Kiora is a blue spell. Her loyalty is so low it's hard to imagine she can’t be taken out by a well-timed Nightveil Specter or Mutavault. If she’s coming down on an empty board, that may be the time for a counterspell, but at that point you probably have bigger issues on your your plate.

Kiora, the Crashing Wave is a real contender but I don’t think we need to worry about Krakens just yet. Your opponent may take care of killing her for you so probably no need to dedicate a slot in your fifteen just to deal with her. Just make sure you understand whether their plan is to use her for ramp, defense or OMFG Krakens and play accordingly.

Xenagos, God of Revels and Ephara, God of the Polis

These are two new Gods who look like they’re ready for action. Both are likely to see standard play (Xenagos already has) and both are dealt with in the exact same manner; Revoke Existence. I remember going through a stack of Commander playables last month and begging to the Gods of MTG that they would reprint this card because it would be so devastating in Theros block. Here is a practical list of some of the cards in Standard that Revoke Existence decimates, which also reads like a list of some of the best cards in the format.

And these are just the cards I know are being played in Standard with frequency. This card is so good right now it’s even a reason to play white. W/B decks continue to look like they’re packing all the answers. Not a whole lot to explain here. If you’re playing white, this has to be at least a 2-of in the sideboard. If not, try Fade into Antiquity. You could even try Unravel the Aether just for the cheaper mana cost. Black may have a lot of trouble as they don’t have anything to combat these cards. All they can do is keep the devotion down or prepare for whatever creature Gruul is trying to slingshot with Xenagos.

Old Enemies

Sometimes new sets just don’t give us many new ā€œbuild around meā€ cards. Theros seemed to define itself pretty clearly after the Pro Tour and so we already know what we want to play. Let’s take a gander at some quick ways we can update what we’ve already got to play with.

Mono-Black Devotion

Obviously we need a healthy dose of Bile Blight and Drown in Sorrow, but there’s another thing Mono-black has to be concerned about. Control is on the rise and that can be a very tricky matchup if the influx of Detention Spheres and Planeswalkers overcomes their stock of removal. I’m predicting the need for Ratchet Bomb and maybe Pithing Needle in the sideboard. Needle helps in the mirror match if you get a little creative with your Underworld Connections targets. I’ve also tried two Corrupt in the sideboard for mirror and control matchups . They’ve been functional, but there’s a lot of Mono-Black at my shop right now. Your metagame may vary.

Also, has everyone forgotten about Slaughter Games? Packing blue as a splash color seems much less relevant for black these days. Why not stack your deck with Blood Crypt and Temple of Malice so we can bring more goodies out of the side like Slaughter Games, Rakdos's Return, and even more Dreadbore if it looks like Bant Walkers is going be a thing. These are all powerful cards that can swing a game if timed correctly.

Mono-Blue Devotion

It doesn't seem like the Blitz red decks will be a problem anymore and that matchup was pretty good to begin with. It’s probably ok to take any Ratchet Bombs out and to start main-decking those Domestications. Wall of Frost may make a comeback along with Triton Tactics. If Brimaz looks to be an issue (and this may sound crazy), Whelming Wave is one of these cards I’m liking more and more. It’s as close to a blue wrath as we’ll get and it’s a lot easier to fire off than an overloaded Cyclonic Rift. Save a lot of guys until after turn four and then ignite Thassa the turn after the wave. That's just nasty.

Consider Nullify over Thassa's Rebuff against the new Gruul Deck if it looks too fast to combat, but overall it doesn't appear that Mono-blue has to change that much. It’s one of those decks that will rise and fall based on everyone else’s metagame adjustments. Also, it's probably time to switch from Jace, Memory Adept back to Aetherling in the sideboard because of the Planeswalker influx.

U/W Control

We’ve already talked heavily about Revoke Existence, but there’s another spell we need to pay attention to: Celestial Flare. It looks like a powerhouse card and I’ve been playing around it a lot lately. It decimates Mono-black and it's devastating in Green matchups after a Supreme Verdict, when they are likely low on cards and creatures. It’s also so cheap that it allows the new tapout control decks the freedom to cast Divination or Detention Sphere in their main phase, or keep up Dissolve and still tackle the threat on the table. It looks like Green has some legs again and that means Mistcutter Hydra must be respected.

I’m also seeing Archangel of Thune and Brimaz sideboard packages. This is very akin to the old U/W deck that switched in four Geist of Saint Traft and went on the aggressive big time. Should be a lot of fun to see what these decks are capable of.

Green Decks

I’m lumping a lot of these together because Green has the same problems across the board when it comes to adaptability. Fade into Antiquity is a must-have these days. Three mana isn’t ideal but we’ll only see more Gods in the months to come. Even cards like Detention Sphere and Underworld Connections give your opponents the time you don’t want them to have. There are some better options for those like Destructive Revelry, but having one-size-fits-all type spell could free up some slots in your sideboard if you're looking for room. Exiling Detention Spheres isn't so bad now that U/W control is relying on reshuffle effects, but timing a clever Unravel the Aether to disrupt their scry 1 seems devilish.

Hunter's Prowess seems like a card that can do a lot of work and I’m very open to experimentation, but five mana at sorcery speed is a ton of mana and Warrior's Lesson never caught on. Green already has the option of Domri Rade and/or Garruk, Caller of Beasts, and those guys are working out fine to keep the gas flowing.

I like the way green is matched up right now with the shift in things. It’s faster and angrier. With Black looking like it will shift back to Doom Blades for a couple weeks, Witchstalkers should be in your sideboard. A lot of decks just can’t beat that card and it’s also a great way to force control to use a very unprofitable wrath. Also, Plummet. Put Plummet in your sideboard. It will make sense in two weeks.

Like all metagames, these things must be monitored and tweaked regularly. The sideboard is the true testament of preparedness, but don’t be afraid to slip something crazy and unexpected in the side. One card no one expects can steal a lot of games. Understanding the fundamentals of your matchups is key to choosing the correct 15 cards, so be sure to test at least half of your games post-board.

In Defense of Burn

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If you were to ask most Magic players which card they've played more than any other, they would likely take a minute to think. Going over years of decks, numerous pet cards and formats they were particularly enamored with, there is a lot of information to parse before answering this question. For me, the answer is Lightning Bolt, and it's not close.

It was early on in my days of casual play when I first saw a Lightning Bolt, and it was among the first cards that ever really resonated with me. Legions was the newest set when I first cracked a pack, and the Onslaught reprint of Shock was readily available to highlight Lightning Bolt's efficiency. Being both a removal spell and a win condition, it didn't take long to see how powerful Lightning Bolt was. Since then I've played it in every non-Vintage format, and if not for my inexperience in Vintage I'd probably have played it there, too.

Despite my attachment to Lightning Bolt, or perhaps because of it, I'm always loathe to sleeve up a Shock. It's like ordering a cheeseburger without bacon. Will I eat it? Yes. But the whole time I'll be thinking about how much better it could be.

That said, I've become quite enamored with the Standard burn deck as of late- Shocks and all. Brad Nelson wrote an article for SCG last week proclaiming how and why he's down on the deck, and when I found myself disagreeing with many of his points it occurred to me that his points were well worth responding to.

Mounting a Defense

For starters, an article denouncing a deck titled "Do Something Powerful" inherently suggests that the deck itself is not powerful. Whether or not the deck is powerful is going to boil down to what exactly you highlight when examining the deck. Shock and Lightning Strike obviously compare poorly to Lightning Bolt, and Warleader's Helix is generally worse than Lightning Helix, but this isn't exactly the most powerful Standard format. Shock isn't so embarrassing when Pack Rat or Elvish Mystic come out to play. Searing Blood is plainly insane in this circumstance. And what about Boros Charm? I mean, Flame Rift is played in Legacy, and that is one point where the comparison is absolutely favorable. Boros Charm and Skullcrack are Modern staples, and Mutavault is a mutli-format all-star. How far off could we really be?

The biggest point that I feel Brad misses on it highlighting Burn as a Satyr Firedancer deck. While I'll admit that Firedancer is what first drew me to the deck, it never felt essential. It was good when you had a good mix of spells and Firedancer against creature decks, but a substantial portion of the meta consisted of Black Devotion and UWx Control decks, where the card was just terrible. I lived the dream of Firedancer into Searing Blood now and again, but far more often I played a crappy 1/1.

When Born of the Gods first released on MTGO, I missed the memo. I found out that the set was legal on MTGO when my round one opponent in a Daily cast Searing Blood against me. At the time, I was playing this list to get a feel for the deck:

RW BURN

Despite not playing any cards from the new set, I 3-1'd the Daily with two wins over the mirror. Their Searing Bloods were good against me, but this was another matchup where Firecdancer was just embarrassing. I was basically playing Chained to the Rocks in the Firedancer slot as a hedge against Master of Waves and Desecration Demon. Later I would find out that Blue Devotion was a very favorable matchup without Chained to the Rocks and make the call that a hedge against Desecration Demon wasn't worth the dead slot against Control decks.

Anyway, the point was that this isn't a Firedancer deck. I was getting the best results by just taking everything to the dome with occasional interaction, which Searing Blood made much better but Firedancer did little for.

Brad's points about attacking from a different angle and going over the top are complete misses for me. Burn spells are a completely unique angle in the format, and on your best draws your opponents just get to sit there and die. Going over the top isn't even a relevant turn of phrase for how this deck plays. Going over the top applies to matchups where both players are playing on the same axis and one does something bigger. With burn, you just dome them. You don't need to "go over the top" when nothing is getting in the way of your Boros Charms anyway.

Brad insists that Burn is going to struggle in a topdeck war. I'll admit that the deck struggles a lot when it draws too many non-Mutavault lands, but that's hardly a unique problem. Sometimes you have to just throw a bunch of burn spells at their head and hope to topdeck, but your deck is filthy with burn spells. As long as you can recognize when it's appropriate to use them to interact you actually end up hitting your outs quite often- Scrylands and Magma Jet certainly don't hurt on this front.

In terms of the sideboard, I won't argue with Brad. The control decks and Black Devotion board into Counterspells and Duress, which are a beating when some of your cards are only good for two damage. Even still, the deck has a healthy quantity of 3-4 damage spells in addition to Skullcrack to mitigate Gray Merchant of Asphodel and Sphinx's Revelation. These matchups are definitely tough, but every other matchup has felt favorable. GR Monsters, Blue Devotion, Wx creature decks... everything that isn't packing counters and discard have been relatively easy to defeat in my experience.

Those points in mind, this is my updated list:

Rw Burn

spells

4 Shock
4 Searing Blood
4 Boros Charm
4 Lightning Strike
4 Chandra's Phoenix
4 Young Pyromancer
1 Annihilating Fire
3 Warleader's Helix
4 Magma Jet
4 Skullcrack

lands

4 Mutavault
1 Boros Guildgate
4 Sacred Foundry
4 Temple of Triumph
8 Mountain
1 Temple of Silence
2 Temple of Abandon

sideboard

4 Chained to the Rocks
4 Mizzium Mortars
3 Toil // Trouble
2 Stormbreath Dragon
2 Boros Reckoner

The Annihilating Fire is something that I'm trying out strictly in terms of costing less mana than Warleader's Helix. Being able to two-spell with Helix is rare, which is the primary motivation here. The random relevance of RFGing creatures can matter against opposing Chandra's Phoenixes and Xathrid Necromancers, which is not for nothing, though perhaps this substitution won't pan out. The other option was Bolt of Keranos, but the Sorcery speed was too bad for a mere Scry 1 to make up for.

As I said, with this deck I feel favored against everything but Black Devotion and control decks, and the fights against those decks are always close. I think that burn ends up getting a bad rap because the games when you lose it can feel like you did nothing- after all, the only point of damage that matters is the last one, so Boros Charm just feels terrible when you lose, but I believe that if you try to be objective about how your matchups play out and learn how to play the deck inside and out then you'll see that the deck is well positioned against most decks while having close matchups against the rest.

Is it the best deck in the format? I don't think there's really a clear answer to that. I wouldn't recommend it to anybody who isn't a seasoned Burn player to just pick up and play, but the deck has a lot of power and I fully intend to PTQ with it.

Next week I'll be back with some Modern updates, but until then feel free to post any questions or concerns about Standard Burn.

Thanks for reading.

-Ryan Overturf

Insider: When to Hold ’em, When to Fold ’em

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Welcome back speculators!

No matter what the price of a card is according to any particular site, you haven't made an actual profit until you've converted the card back into cash.

This week's article is primarily a response to all the crazy price spikes happening in Modern right now. People are getting super excited that their $5 card suddenly jumped to $15 dollars but then they try to unload it and nobody wants it.

I constantly have people try to unload cards that recently spiked for my stable high-dollar cards (dual lands and other Legacy staples) and I just say no thanks. Part of the problem here is that price memory works both ways. When a $2 card suddenly jumps to $10 a lot of people will pass because they remember it at $2 just a short time ago.

Now, if you're in the boat of "has a bunch of cards that just spiked," right after (or during) the spike is often the best time to unload. Price spiking often creates false demand, which just means that demand is artificially increased due to people rushing to pick up a card and not wanting to "miss out", but this false demand dies quickly when the price peaks.

This is one of the main reasons our authors constantly re-iterate the concept of "leave the last 10% for the next guy"--it's always best to lock in solid profits as quickly as possible.

It's also important to understand whether a card's price jump is a price correction or a spike. Spikes occur very quickly and are usually caused by a buyout, a tournament breakout, or a new spoiler.

Price corrections occur when a card is underpriced given the amount of play it sees. These are typically more gradual price increases (though they may have a sudden jump) because the demand is sustainable as players are buying the cards to play.

Hold 'Em'sĀ (Recent Price Corrections)

Tectonic Edge

This card has gone from $2 to $4.75 within the past two months. It's been a known Modern staple, but many believed as an uncommon its ceiling was relatively low.

However it hasn't seen any additional printings (outside of Worldwake and FNM promo) and demand has finally outpaced supply. The fact that RWU control decks running four Celestial Colonnades have started to dominate the Modern scene just makes it that much more critical to run a way to deal with them--and they happen to fall right outside of Bolt/Helix range.

Birthing Pod

This card is a pillar of the Modern format, finding play in both Melira and Kiki-Pod decks. Until less than two months ago it was sitting around $5 for the longest time. The many fellow QSers who have been bullish on this card were clearly correct as it's now $10.

Phantasmal Image

A two-mana clone is nothing to sneeze at. It was dominant in Standard and remains excellent in Modern. The mana cost fits perfectly in Pod chains to allow for quick combo kills. The fact that almost every card in Modern that can target a creature is a kill spell already heavily mitigates its drawback.

In the past two months it has steadily increased from $4.75 to $7.5, slightly over a 50% increase.

Stoneforge Mystic

While not a Modern price correction, the sheer amount of X-Blade decks seeing in play in Legacy courtesy of True-Name Nemesis meant that this card was far more in demand than its previous $10 price tag suggested and was bound to jump. It has managed to hold its existing price of $27-28 for almost two months so it's safe to assume that price is here to stay.

Cryptic Command

This card was already on the rise before the Faeries deck become viable again (see the "Fold Em" section for my thoughts on the rest of that deck). This card is heavily played in the UWR control decks and now that Deathrite is banned, Snapcaster becomes better--snapcastering Cryptics is obviously brutal in the mirror.

A month ago this card was sitting at $25 before it began its ascent to $43-46. While it has been printed three times (including the Player Rewards card) its return to dominance along with blue in general means this price will likely stick until the next reprint.

Spell Snare

While this card hasn't actually jumped yet, most UWR control decks are running 2-3 of them (as are those damn Faeries players). With the return of Snapcaster/Helix decks, Tarmogoyf and Dark Confidant's reprinting, and the rise of Merfolk, the number of two-drops in Modern has steadily increased.

Last year (pre-Modern Masters) this card was sitting in the $8-9 range mostly courtesy of Legacy play. It only has two printings, Dissension and Modern Masters. I believe it can easily jump to $4.5-$5.5 come Modern season and is a relatively safe buy. Given this is only a 50-60% price increase this seems better as a trade target though.

Fold 'Em's (Recent Spikes on Their Way Down)

Determining when to sell is one of the more challenging aspects of MTG finance. Some are obvious--you got the chase mythic from the new set worth a ton of money right now as supply is severely limited, you should get rid of it. Others are not obvious--this card just got banned in one of the main formats that played it, should I hold onto them or unload them before everyone else?

Teferi, Mage of Zhalfir

This card showed up as a one-of in the sideboard of the "Blue Moon" deck which broke out at PT Valencia. The basis of the deck was to lock your opponent out via Blood Moon and Spreading Seas and then win with Snapcaster Mages, burn, and Batterskulls. Teferi creates a "must counter" threat you can cast at the end of your opponent's turn.

The card quickly jumped to $30 and within a few days has already dropped down to less than $20. While the spike was artificial I feel that this card has a lot of potential in other decks--I only advocate selling now because the price is continuing to drop and you can rebuy them back later when it starts to plateau again.

Amulet of Vigor

This card showed up at the PT as the key card in a Summer Bloom deck with Hive Mind and Primeval Titan. The problem with the deck is that without the Amulet it is much slower (it plays a lot of ETB tapped lands and bounce lands) which lets any control deck just focus on countering the key cards.

Unfortunately Amulet lives and dies by this deck. While it does look fun to play, it lacks consistency and relies on a unique card with no suitable #4-8 replacements.

Porphyry Nodes

This card showed up in a few sideboards in the Top 8. It acts as a repeating removal spell (on the play) against creature-heavy decks. It's pretty "techy" and I imagine a lot of the creature-heavy decks were not prepared for it.

One of the real beauties is the downside of killing the "weakest" creature can actually be a huge boon they tend to be mana dorks which increase the aggro deck's velocity. By playing it turn one against an opposing Noble Hierarch they either have to pass the turn without doing anything, or lose both the Hierarch and their next threat.

This card was a bulk rare for the longest time until this breakout. The ability is powerful and it's not tied to any specific deck (it's good in any control deck which features white--a majority of them). However, as a one- to two-of in the sideboard, its current price is not likely to stick.

Bitterblossom, Mistbind Clique & Secluded Glen

It appears WoTC was correct in unbanning Bitterblossom. The fear of Faerie's dominance was clearly unfounded as people playing it at PT Valencia came away with nothing.

While I don't think Bitterblossom will drop back to the pre-jump price (as it was steady at $15 before the unbanning) I do think its decline will likely continue until it hits that $35-$40 mark. It will likely stay there until a reprint (which many believe will be in the Modern Event Deck coming out this spring).

The Mistbinds and Secluded Glens are far more likely to drop back to near their old prices (with maybe a 25-30% increase from those pre-spike prices).

Jason’s Alticle – A Bit of History Repeating, Repeating

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Greetings, Spectators!

Well, maybe you weren't spectators this weekend. Is it just me, or has everyone else already made money on all of the cards that spiked this weekend?

Everything Old Is New Again

amulet

azusa

The first spikes we saw were associated with a ramp deck that accelerated into an early Hive Mind, winning by forcing the opponent to pay for pacts they could not afford. Summer Bloom effects combined with Amulet of Vigor and Ravnica bouncelands can ramp you very quickly.

Azusa was gettable at around $15 at the start of Friday's event and by Friday night the card was selling for $30. An EDH all-star and powerful effect, the card is very good.

So why did I advise against buying at $15?

Namely, I think this is a $15 or less card. The "it's used in EDH" argument doesn't compel me particularly, as EDH demand saw this card go from bulk rare to $4 rare. What made it spike from $4 to $15 then down a bit was this exact deck in a Modern event back in March of 2013.

The card is not a new card, the deck is not new and Matthias Hunt said in an interview that, in terms of sequencing, it was one of the most difficult he has ever played. I don't expect a difficult deck that didn't establish itself as a real Modern contender last time around to suddenly put up the kind of demand that will keep it from correcting to a price closer to $15 than to $30.

It's already down $5 from the $30 it peaked at and I expect it to continue to fall. Even if it doesn't hit its pre-spike price, I think it will be close enough that if you make $3 or $4 a copy after fees, if you can find more buyers than sellers, it wasn't worth paying $15 a copy up front. Making 20% is good, but I don't want a mere 20% appreciation when the buy-in is so high.

True, it's easier to move a small number of copies than it is a large number, but I dislike large buy-ins that preclude a double-up. Not every investment is a double-up, but I didn't like Azusa based largely on historical precedent. After all, this has spiked before.

So what is different now? I think there were more buyers at the inflated prices, so the card sold out quickly on TCG Player and that was all it took. There were fewer than 40 copies of this card on TCG Player this weekend, and with a lot of individual actors, it wasn't hard to buy the site out.

With a lot of new, amateur financiers taking their cues from TCG Player, people, in my view, overreacted. These were selling for $30 on TCG Player while there were still $17 copies on Amazon. With such poor fundamentals being exercised by this new wave of speculators, I had no confidence in this card maintaining $30 long enough for copies I ordered online (if anyone I ordered from shipped them) long enough for me to resell them for much more than I paid.

Twitter sensation Nick Becvar was very bullish on this card and encouraged people to be buyers at $15. I hope he made some people some money, but I suspect the people who made out the best here were the people who had copies already.

There was money to be made here for sure, I just calculated that it wasn't enough to risk being a bagholder. I passed. Not everyone agrees with that choice.

becvar

Amulet of Vigor

Quickly, Amulet of Vigor has spiked historically, twice. A lot of people expressed surprise this weekend that a "bulk rare" was now going for $4. Dafuq? Bulk rare? Maybe in 2011. This card spiked at a PT or GP when (correct me if I'm wrong) I want to say Channel Fireball broke the card in conjunction with Cloudpost.

Luckily for Ryan Bushard, he was at the event with a bunch of them in his box of shame and he made $10 a copy on the floor of the event. If I had hundreds of dollars for every time a card in my box of shame suddenly became the new hotness... I would be in the exact same position because that happens sometimes.

I have lost money because I buylisted cards that later went up and have had no regrets, but for some reason I can never bring myself to fire-sale busted specs.

If my Nightveil Specters that I bought on the ridiculous premise that they are "good in Vintage" which is an embarrassingly-idiotic thing to have said out loud let alone spent money on can become worth money, I am going to sit on the Hypersonic Dragons I bought for the same reason. There isn't much hope for all these copies of Boom // Bust and Punishing Fire, but maybe some day.

Amulet spiked again in March when people were using it to play bouncelands in an Azusa deck. The only reason I can come up with that things spiked even harder this time around is that there are more greater fools buying after two or three or four price adjustments.

Couple that with the recent trend of prices spiking hard and players panicking, thinking they better buy now if they ever want the cards to play with and you have a recipe for spikes like this.

It's the players who get the worst of this--they end up paying top dollar for a card that corrects lower after they buy it and sometimes it turns out the deck isn't that good and they are stuck with copies worth half what they paid. They get angry at the finance community for "ruining the game" with their speculation, when in reality their own role in the process was the only thing that allowed many speculators to make any money (and avoid learning a costly lesson).

Azusa and Amulet are fine cards. I sold the rest of my Amulets for $4.50 each and didn't see any opportunity in buying at that price. The ones I had left were Chinese, cards I was unable to move when demand for the card was low and which resided in my box of shame. The people I sold to in person didn't care about language, merely buying into hype.

I certainly didn't have enough copies to make real money, though, and that is unfortunately who is going to make money here. I see Amulet correcting to closer to its original $2 than its current $5 ish.

Buy This Instead (If Anything)

bloom

Visions only of course. Some other of the many printings of this card buylist for much more than the Visions version. I don't think white-bordered versions of the card should be more than the original, and I think this is due for a price correction. This is a risky, unproven spec and the multiple printings give this a lower chance of upside than a rare from the terrible Kamigawa block like Azusa, but this has the benefit of not having gone up in price yet.

Am I buying this particular card? No, I'm not but let it represent the way you should be thinking.

You're not going to make money following others--the ship on Azusa and Amulet sailed. However, cards like Summer Bloom still haven't budged, probably because there are more than 40 copies on TCG Player and it never went out of stock, triggering a panic.

Foil Summer Blooms didn't move, and Modern pimping will be a thing. The deck isn't Tier 1, but it also isn't going anywhere and the more Modern starts to represent Legacy, the more foils will matter. Foil bouncelands get played in cubes and EDH deck and those didn't move either.

Hive Mind didn't jump as much as it could have, considering it's the marquee card in the deck. There is money to be made, so if you stayed out of the Azusa frenzy, don't panic. There are other cards in the deck.

More Silliness

A past

Ascension

See those bumps in March? That was the result of this deck doing well at the same Modern event where we saw Azusa and Amulet spike. Brief interest, unsustained interest, price normalization. The difference this time around has to be attributed to more speculators.

Finkel and Kai played the deck, but so what? They were going to play the deck anyway. Not only that, Deathrite's banning doesn't make this a better choice in the new meta. You know how I know?

finkel

Finkel said so. This deck is not better or easier to play now. These price spikes are not corrections, they're the result of buyouts and a panicked market. The PT wasn't bigger or more prominent than the event last March. The player base didn't quintuple since then.

Pyromancer Ascension should correct. It might not hit $2 again, although last time it "spiked" that was where it ended up. Historical data is hard to track and multiple sites may tell a different story, but although I bought a few Ascensions at $2, it was because people asked me for them.

If you had them to sell into the hype, great. But by the time your order gets fulfilled (if it doesn't get canceled) I don't predict there will be buyers for your copies.

Buy This Instead

angel

Another deck that is nothing new using Ad Nauseam and Angel's Grace to draw the entire deck and then combo-kill them made a splash at the PT this weekend. Kai and Finkel didn't play it so it went under the radar a bit more. It's just as durdly a deck.

I don't think Angel's Grace will go up soon, I just think you snag cards for the deck because inevitably, it will get covered at the next Modern event. If there is a small number of copies on TCG Player, expect the hype train to barrel out of the station at full steam, and when it does, you'll have copies to sell into said hype.

Ad Nauseum, Phyrexian Unlife, Lotus Bloom, and Simian Spirit Guide are all in the deck. I don't think you will make money back soon, but I think at the immediate next Modern event, people who didn't pay attention to this one and who are new to speculating will want to buy up copies and you should be able to oblige them.

After all, none of this is new.

Take a Few Minutes to Read This

It has nothing to do with my alticle, but I have been laughing my ass off all morning.

This is a great example of how not to run a business. I imagine this is going to hurt sales, making his profanity-laden rants the nails in his coffin. It's like watching the Titanic head for the ice berg in slow motion. Words can't expressed how much I love everything about this situation.

Back on Track

It was a good weekend for Canada. As an American hockey fan, watching Team USA implode in the game against Finland was pretty painful. My favorite player, Patrick Kane, struggled the whole game and his total failure to make a goal happen despite beating Tuuka Rask out of his pads several times was frustrating. I don't know whether they just didn't care because playing for Bronze is too disappointing or if they just ran into some bad luck--after they failed to cut the two-goal lead in half, they stopped playing.

Team Canada fared better, though, and as a Blackhawks fan, it was nice to see Toews, Keith and Sharp get gold medals and Niklas Hjalmarsson, Johnny Oduya and Marcus Kruger of Sweden get silver. Canada, though, cruised easily through the tournament (although Latvian goalie Kristers Gudļevskis nearly blanked them, standing on his head and playing so hard that his body literally overheated and he collapsed) and won the Gold.

Shaun McLaren did the Great White North even prouder by beating fellow Canuck Jacob Wilson to win Pro Tour Born of the Gods. Modern and Limited prowess were required to take the event down, and McLaren won a nailbiter in game five. Despite losing his lands to Ajani in game four, Wilson almost clawed his way back to take the series 3-1, but it was not to be.

Pro Tour Born of the Gods

Let's talk turkey, shalls we?

PT Born of the Gods Top 8 Decks

Now on their own page! I am loving how much easier this makes my life and yours.

I predicted a Birthing Pod deck would win the event, and I was almost correct. Wilson had McLaren on the ropes, up 2-1 and poised to take it all down in game four, but it was not to be. McLaren's sideboard helped a great deal. Threads of Disloyalty was the savior in game five.

That ship has likely sailed, but a similar card I really like is Vedalken Shackles. If the Blue Moon deck continues to be a thing, and why would it not, Shackles is bound to go up. I liked this as a pickup a long time ago and have a bunch of copies that I made very little on, but even then I was lucky as I sold out before its reprinting was announced in Modern Masters.

Modern Masters isn't as much of a reason for the price to be so low as the current price indicates, and I think there's upside. Blue is good, Islands are good and Sun Tzu said "a bushel of my enemy's grain is worth ten bushels of my grain" so I like Shackles a lot.

Shackles are a bit of a nonbo with Blood Moon turning Steam Vents off, but with 11 basic Islands in the deck, you can snag a Griselbrand if the game goes that long even though you're more likely to stymie them by stealing a Goyf or foil them by stealing a Melira.

There's actually no end to what you can swipe with this powerful artifact. While it's more mana-intensive than Threads, it's also reusable and scales up. $12 is totally incorrect in a world where Pyromancer Ascension flirted with $10. Tell yourself it's good in EDH, too, if that helps.

The Storm deck may not be new, but Chris Fennel did well to make Top 8, a feat not accomplished by Budde or Finkel, although Limited performance matters for the purposes of making Top 8. Shivan Reef over Sulfur Falls is interesting. It's all about that turn one cantrip.

Nothing new with an affinity Top 8, I'm just glad. It's one of the less expensive decks and it is consistent. Cranial Plating is legal in Modern and that seems unfair to me if I don't get to have Green Sun's Zenith.

Tarmotwin sounds like the name of a deck I came up with as a joke. When Tarmogoyf first broke out, people jammed it in everything. "Why not jam Goyf in a combo deck? We can call it Twinagoyf!" No, they call it Tarmotwin and it appears not to be a joke. All hail Tarmotwin.

Lots of Twin decks in the Top 8, something most people predicted would not happen. I have seen a lot of people asking "Why is Twin so bad right now" and three copies in the Top 8 seems to argue with that notion a bit.

Lee Shi-Tian ran one copy of Teferi, Mage of Zhalfir in his sideboard of Blue Moon. If that is justification for someone buying out TCG Player of Teferi I am a monkey's uncle. Stop it.

The rest of Blue Moon is exciting. My brother who hasn't played since the 1990s asked me "is Counterburn still a thing?" and I snap said "no" until I remembered, yeah, it kind of is.

Lightning Bolt is excellent removal and reach, Blood Moon is as close to a Back to Basics as you can get in this format, and Shackles snags anything Bolt can't kill. Master of Waves is good in this deck and Snapcaster Mage seems to be finally living up to his potential. Snaps is likely the biggest winner in a post-Deathrite Shaman format. This card will never be as cheap as it was again.

There isn't much more to say, here. The Modern meta is exciting, innovations are happening, and even if no one innovated, people are just going to pretend the same old decks are somehow new and the prices will go out of control all over again.

SCG St. Louis Open

SCG St. Louis Top 16

While Modern had a lot of exciting new decks that weren't new, Standard is back to suffering from a crippling lack of diversity. Of the eight decks in the Top 8, five were some variety of Monsters deck.

R/G Ramp has always been a thing. My first deck used Orcish Lumberjacks to try and drop Shivan Dragon early. It's no surprise that the deck is doing well in Standard given all the tools Wizards seems determined to give to R/G. It's good to see Devotion get edged out although Dustin Biggers managed 8th.

Not all Monsters versions use Xenagod, but I think it gives the deck a lot of punch. He is easy to turn on, and turning a Stormbreath Dragon into a Hidetsugu's Second Rite is appealing. A 5/5 like Polukranos deals the full 10 Rite does and is useful as removal as well.

I predicted when Xenagod was spoiled that it was better to play creatures you would play already rather than try to jam cute stuff like Kalonian Hydra. That seems to be mostly playing out, although I won't be shocked to see someone get there with a hydra. The Jund version jams Reaper of the Wilds and Dreadbore and the mana base doesn't really suffer. Very nice.

Ben Stepka and U/W Control didn't manage to beat Jonathan Habel and his monsters, but I like this build. I wish I had watched coverage to see when he boarded in Angel of Serenity. Fated Retribution proves it isn't too many mana to get play in Standard, which I think is cool. I liked this card for EDH, but even with the Standard play it's still a terrible pickup.

You heard me. It's a non-mythic one-of in a deck that is difficult to play. It's going to take a lot to make this card worth more than some of the other rares with the benefit of high demand from casual players.

It's too bad Ryan Hipp got 9th because I almost didn't notice his deck and it's the only thing I am excited about. Using Ephara and Brimaz together as Heliod intended, this deck also runs Whipzedat. Hipp likely got 9th because the guy he played in round three dropped, not because his deck isn't as good as any other deck in the Top 8. Ignore 9th place decks at your own peril.

This is a real build and no one is going to see Blood Baron or Obzedat coming; they'll think the Temple of Silence is there for the scry triggers. The 16th place B/W Midrange deck was a little bit similar in construction. No B/W weenie-esque builds with Xathrid Necromancer in evidence. That type of strategy was on its way out before they printed Bile Blight.

SCG Open St. Louis Legacy Top 16

How fun to see Painter's Stone take the whole thing down. The deck is tough to pilot but sometimes gets served early, free wins. I like some number of Spinal Villain somewhere in the 75, but I think that role is being filled by Jaya Ballard, who is a bit more flexible. The deck works and although the recruiters make it expensive, it continues to pop up. Nice work, Greg Smith, if that is your real name.

"Greg" managed to beat a traditional RUG Delver deck, which isn't always easy with the amount of disruption that deck can muster. Still, Hayden Passarelli's sideboard had no answers apart from maybe Ancient Grudge and he has to settle for the Silver medal.

Two Deathblade decks in third and fourth sported the powerful combo of Stoneforge Mystic and True-Name Nemesis as did the 5th place UWR Delver deck. It's a good thing Reddit pointed out that Esper Deathblade is a fringe deck that has fallen by the wayside because I would never have guessed that given the results at this event and the GP in Paris.

The 7th-place Shardless BUG deck also packed a Jace the Mind Sculptor, prompting me to reiterate that Jace is absolutely not dead in Legacy. Dead, fringe decks don't get third place at an SCG Open, and the very concept of "tiers" is a little silly in Legacy where any given Sunday any deck has the power to get there through a combination of luck, skill and preparation.

Sideboarding matters a great deal in Legacy and those who do it well do well themselves. I'm not ready to call Deathblade anything other than one of the best decks in the format.

Cody Johnson managed 6th with the Lands build we all love so much. Sylvan Safekeeper was not in evidence in this 75. Is this the best Punishing Grove deck? I can't say, but I am a big fan of this build and its popularity did something I hadn't expected and made Tabernacle go up another hundred bucks on some sites.

I imagine there are a few people who were saving up and having the card pulled a little further out of their grasp can't feel good. Don't wait on out-of-print stuff.

I toyed with buying a Land Equilibrium for EDH at $25 and decided against it because I thought $25 was a bit expensive. Maybe it's expensive for EDH, but it's a steal for a 20-year-old card that is totally unfair. Any playable Legends card that hasn't spiked will, and any that hasn't spiked twice yet is due for another.

20 years is a long time to keep a piece of cardboard from disintegrating. Just think--somewhere in a shop that doesn't sell singles or in someone's attic a Tabernacle is sitting in a binder on a page between an Urborg and a Sorrow's Path. That will be a nice find for whoever uncovers it.

The unlucky 9th place finisher with Death and Taxes ran a pretty stock list as well. I suspect any chance of innovation in Legacy outside a real testing breakthrough would have been accomplished last week for Paris, not so much for a random Open. Still, innovation is happening all the time and you want to be one of the first to notice.

Is Goblins the pet deck of the week? Sorry Merfolk. Also, sorry about your poor showing in the Modern PT. Lots of people audibled into a different deck when they saw all the people who cam-loaded for bear with Anger of the Gods. I expected Firespout, but since Faeries wasn't a thing, why force yourself into green? Anger is an improvement on Volcanic Fallout for a few reasons and it was all over the PT.

There you have it. Join me next week for a shorter article unless they start paying me by the word.

Insider: Deafening Speculation

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Pro Tour Born of the Gods is behind us now, and what a sad thing that is. Modern pro tours are easily my favorite—they give us the best chance to see powerful things take place and often offer sweet money-making opportunities. This weekend was no exception. We got to see awesome new decks, updates on old favorites, and expert anticipation of the metagame. The top eight matches (that I was awake to see) were all excellent, and despite complaints about the change to best-of-three in the quarter- and semifinals, it was cool to see every game of every match—even if it did take all day.

I made zero purchases during the pro tour, despite there being a few reasonable opportunities. I decided against them all for various reasons, but that doesn’t mean I didn’t make money. I’ve been holding all of my Modern stock in anticipation of this very weekend, and now that hype is increasing even more for the format, it may be time to start selling out. Today, I’ll be going over why I avoided the hot targets this weekend and what kind of prospects we have moving forward.

Avoiding the Noise

The tournament started with Draft, which is my favorite part of pro tours, but not wake-up-at-3:00-a.m. favorite. So I missed the sweet BTT action, but managed to tune in in time to hear whisperings of Matthias Hunt’s deck, the Amulet of Vigor combo deck. Indeed, as a QS Insider, we knew before anyone else what Matthias was playing. I decided to stay away from Amulet this time, but I’m impressed by QS’s diligence in getting early info out to all of us.

I stayed away from Amulet for a few reasons. First, the card already spiked from bulk to $2.00 a few months ago. The time to buy in, in my mind, was back then. Second, the deck is already a known quantity and hasn’t exactly taken the format by storm. Third, and most importantly, Matthias himself said that the deck folded to Thoughtseize. You know what’s already a Modern staple across multiple archetypes? Yep, Thoughtseize.

Amulet climbed as high as $8.38 for about five minutes, but is already down to $5.90. The card spiked significantly, so I may have been wrong to avoid it when I had the opportunity to buy in. But the fact is that I just don’t believe in the card or the deck. It’s weak to a universal staple. It’s true that a card doesn’t have to be good to make you money. But if you’re like me, with limited ability and willingness to invest in cardstock, you want your buys to count. This just didn’t fit the bill for me. And it’s worth noting that the highest buylist price on Trader Tools is still only $2.26.

The new Blue Moon deck, which saw one pilot into the top eight, was certainly making waves throughout the tournament. On Friday, I tweeted about the possibility of Blood Moon being a decent buy, and as it turns out, it did go up several dollars. It was probably worth buying your copies for personal use, but I decided against speculating on the card mainly due to its many, many printings. It’s also the type of card that is only good in a metagame unprepared for it. Paradoxically, the more people that play this deck, the less good the deck is. That doesn’t seem like a favorable situation when considering a spec.

Finally, Teferi, Mage of Zhalfir spiked from under $10 to around $30. This was due to one-of play from the Blue Moon sideboard. I don’t know if any QS Insiders bought in to this card, but if so, let me make a suggestion for the future: one-of sideboard cards are generally not highly profitable. Then again, Teferi can be buylisted to Mythic MTG for $22 right now, which completely blows my mind. Still, I’d sell any copies you can into this hype, because even if the card starts seeing a ton of play, as a one-of, it can’t possibly maintain its current price tag. (Almost the exact same comments can be applied to Porphyry Nodes, which jumped from below $1 to $8.)

Standard Opportunities

Aaron Forsythe tweeted a telling stat shortly after the pro tour ended:

Forsythe Tweet (Anger)

At $2, I don’t think Anger of the Gods is a good cash purchase right now. It is a rare from a large set that has been drafted a ridiculous amount and will still be drafted for the next several months. But because this card is likely in many a local binder, it represents an excellent trade target. Don’t expect the price to go too crazy, but $4 or $5 seems likely, even if it takes a while to happen. From my perspective, it can take its time, because that allows me to pile away as many copies as possible! If this ever dips below $1, I think that is the point to start buying in with cash.

With Deathrite Shaman out of the format, Scavenging Ooze stepped up to fill the role of maindeckable graveyard hate. I wrote about this possibility in my article discussing banned list implications, but despite seeing quite a bit of on-camera play this weekend, the card is still at its price floor. I’m going to take this opportunity to double down on this call, and say that Ooze is well worth targeting. I’m on the fence about whether this is a cash buy just yet, but I will be trading for 100% of the copies I see in binders.

As Standard-legal cards, I think these two are excellent targets right now. They are undervalued compared to the amount of play they see in Modern, but do not see much play in Standard. As we get further away from these cards being actively opened and added to collections, expect to see their prices grow steadily over time.

Top Eight

The top eight this weekend was excellent, right? If you consider the three different versions of Combo Twin to be different decks (which is arguable, but just pretend, okay?), then we had eight distinct archetypes in the top eight. Furthermore, all were familiar, known quantities. Some may call this boring, but I call it a healthy format. I am a bit surprised to see zero copies of either Wild Nacatl or Bitterblossom in the top decks. It’s almost as if the Modern banned list has some unnecessary cards!

A healthy format like this is good for the average player—if you can find a competitive deck that suits your playstyle, you’re more likely to enjoy playing. A mix of decks in the top eight also keeps prices spread out among more cards, which helps us avoid a situation where there is one best deck. When that happens, certain cards become prohibitively expensive.

The problem, of course, is that it offers fewer buying opportunities to speculators. With all these decks being known quantities, we’re not going to see any crazy spikes. The spikes we did see were for cards in ultimately unsuccessful decks, meaning that less money will likely be earned by buyers.

And you know what? That’s okay. Don’t make bad purchases just because it’s a major event and you’re determined to buy something. This is a surefire way to lose money. We all want to find awesome opportunities, and in some cases, we may be able to create them ourselves. But buying into cards like Nivmagus Elemental or Amulet of Vigor on day one of a pro tour, after one or two match wins, is just risky behavior.

I like to look at what cards didn’t spike during pro tour weekend, despite seeing success. Birthing Pod and Spellskite both saw a significant amount of play, but didn’t really see any bump in price. Both of these cards have doubled up or better in the past six months, so picking them up is not without risk, but both have a little more room to grow.

The card that intrigues me the most, though, is Arcbound Ravager. This is a key card in Affinity—one of the reasons to play the deck, really. It’s always a four-of and is at its historical floor. Before being reprinted in Modern Masters, it was getting close to $30, but now retails for around half that. If Affinity takes down a major tournament at any point, I expect a significant jump on this card. Keep an eye on the price to see if it dips further, and keep your other eye on tournament results to see if Affinity keeps performing. This probably won’t jump over night, but when it does, it will be big.

I hope you enjoyed the pro tour this weekend. Have some ideas for good pick-ups that I missed? Share them in the comments!

Insider: [MTGO] Portfolio Reviews

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It's been two months since I started writing this column. Today I'm going to review the specs I have suggested so far, then talk about future opportunities.

Let's start with a number: 22.14%. That is the average profit percentage of all the specs I suggested in my past articles (based on MtgoGoldfish data, and including Deathrite Shaman). Different events had opposite effects on those specs, but things have turned out pretty good overall. I hope you were also able to generate some profits off these calls.

Let's see how it worked out...

Modern Positions

Modern, Modern and Modern again. Need more proof that this format is by far your best friend in the world of MTGO investments?

The vast majority of the targets in my previous articles were Modern cards. If one thing is certain when it comes to Modern, when prices are low you know there's opportunity, and prices will eventually go up--next season, next GP, next PT or the next random event that sheds light on a specific card. With no rotating sets nor sudden changes of the metagame, no positions are more predictable than Modern ones.

Whatever you did or did not do with your Modern specs, remember that the goal was to acquire good opportunities for the next Modern season, between April and June. Selling after a big and unexpected gain is totally fine and allows you to make tix available sooner than expected. Don't worry now about the other cards that didn't move or are going down; their turn as not just come yet.

The Ban List Announcement

A "nice surprise" came with the banning of Deathrite Shaman and the unbanning of Bitterblossom and Wild Nacatl. Several cards got a nice boost, including Knight of the Reliquary,Ā Vengevine and Gifts Ungiven.

At this point, I have sold my copies of Knight of the ReliquaryĀ at 4.9 tix and myĀ Vengevines for 15.3 tix each. I'm still waiting forĀ Gifts Ungiven to gain a little bit more. Unfortunately, the latter did not benefit from the PT results.

Pro Tour Valencia

As I'm writing these lines, I don't know who will win the PT. My bet? Splinter Twin.

However, with the Top 8 already locked in, here are the observations I make:

  • The Top 8 decks: UWR, Storm, Pod, UR (Blue Moon), 2x Splinter Twin, Affinity, Another Splinter Twin?Ā A good variety of decks shows the B&R changes did their job and eradicated Jund. Concerning the other part of the ban list announcement, not much to see.
  • No Zoo in the Top 8, barely one aggro deck. And despite a strong presence at the beginning of the PT, it seems like all the other strategies totally crushed the cat's much heralded comeback.
  • And a big zero Bitterblossoms! Overall, the faerie enchantment didn't do good at all--if you hold any I would strongly suggest selling. As some predicted, Faeries is not strong enough in Modern, and it seems likeĀ Bitterblossom is not as scary as thought.
  • No Gifts decks. Surprising, considering that Gifts control decks are an established, albeit minor, part of the metagame.
  • The PT results remind me of PT Philadelphia (the first Modern PT), before Deathrite Shaman made Jund a house. Looking for some insight of how the Modern format is going to evolve? Maybe we should take a look at how the format evolved after PT Philadelphia.
  • A couple known archetypes stayed a bit under the radar: Tron, Scapeshift and Merfolk. Cards from these decks might be interesting targets.

The PT is a single event dominated by pro strategies. The MTGO Modern world is known to be a little bit different. Expect to see a wide variety of different decks having their share of play online. Any cards that didn't shine at the PT are potentially good pick-ups if their price is low enough.

Perspectives

The finish line for my Modern investments is around April to June. If a specific card reaches its peak sooner than expected, or if it benefits from a tournament appearance to jump through the ceiling, I'll seriously consider selling it.

Amulet of Vigor is a perfect example from the recent PT results. I sold them into the hype this weekend, and I'm not sure if 2+ tix is sustainable considering the deck's results and its presence on MTGO before, e.g. fringe appearances.

As for the cards that haven't shown any strength so far (Mindbreak Trap,Ā Iona, Shield of Emeria, Lotus Cobra and many others), they still have two or three more months to go.

Speaking of Mindbreak Trap, did you see how successful the Storm/Pyromancer deck was? (It is probably a good time to sell your Pyromancer Ascension by the way.) Mindbreak Trap is an answer almost every Modern deck can play, and its price have been dipping a little bit more during the BnG events. This is a mythic with a 15-20 tix potential and with Legacy applications. You may want to (re)consider it.

New Additions

Considering the PT results and some price drops due to BnG release events, some cards I mentioned in my previous articles might still be attractive now, perhaps even more so.

Want to know more about potential Modern targets these days? Check the Modern index on MtgoGoldfishĀ and sort them by Weekly Biggest Losers. You'll find which cards have recently dipped significantly, which should constitute a good opportunity before the Modern season begins.

Two cards that I have been buying recently: Steel Overseer and Lingering Souls. I think the flashback sorcery is a great target at its current price (especially at GoatBots).Ā Among the cards previously mentioned, Master of the Pearl Trident andĀ the Scars lands have returned to a comfortable buying price.

Standard Positions

PT Valencia influenced my picks here too. These cards are Modern-playable and could be more in demand in couple of months. Because they belong to the Theros set, they are more speculative positions than the other cyclical Modern cards. Again, BnG events made these cards cheaper than usual and therefore very attractive to me.

Anger of the Gods andĀ Swan Song were seen on camera this weekend and could see more play in the future. I also picked up more copies ofĀ Nykthos, Shrine to Nyx,Ā Tymaret, the Murder King andĀ Soldier of the Pantheon.

I can clearly see Anger of the Gods following the likes ofĀ Slagstorm and reaching 2 to 4 tix next year. Soldier of the Pantheon makes me think ofĀ Champion of the Parish, with a 2 to 4 tix potential here too.

I'm ready to hold these cards for a longer term if they don't show strength during the Modern season--they still could be Standard contenders one year from now.

 

Thank you for reading!

Sylvain Lehoux

Insider: Pro Tour Valencia Breakdown

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Unless you spent last weekend under a rock, you saw and heard significant buzz around Pro Tour Valencia. The recent B&R changes made this Modern event even more anticipatory. And with speculation at its most rampant, excessive hype and card buyouts were a sure thing.

Now that the event is in the books (well, I’m writing this while the semifinals are taking place) we can take a step back and identify which price spikes are here to stay and which are likely to fall right back down again.

It will depend heavily on the popularity of the decks in question as well as their respective success rates. Both factors are key, and a card may sustain a price increase by satisfying one factor and not the other.

This week I’ll take a first look at what cards moved most last weekend. I will attempt to project where these prices will settle in the short term as well as how they may move heading into Modern PTQ season.

Pyromancer Ascension +267%

Ascension

In hindsight, storm decks gained in strength significantly with the banning of Deathrite Shaman in Modern. Both Pyromancer Ascension and Past in Flames rely heavily on graveyard interactions. It is obvious how much better these cards become when their caster doesn’t have to deal with constant turn one Deathrite Shamans all day.

Even before Deathrite was printed I remember seeing Pyromancer Ascension decks on occasion. At $2 a copy, this card was a winner most of us overlooked.

Guess who didn’t overlook Storm in Modern: Chris Fennel. He made Top 8 running a sweet storm deck with the full set of Pyromancer Ascension and three Past in Flames. With this success and with the popularity of Storm in general, I anticipate this strategy will stick around come Modern season.

Of course, decks will be running graveyard hate in force throughout the PTQ’s ahead so this deck will be kept in check. But value-wise, I expect this jump in Pyromancer Ascension to stick. In the short term the price target is right where it’s at plus/minus a buck, with likelihood of approaching $10 during PTQ season.

Teferi, Mage of Zhalfir +238%

Teferi

This casual favorite could not be more the opposite of Pyromancer Ascension. Teferi didn’t show up as a four-of in a Top 8 deck. Instead he received a ton of hype for being a one-of sideboard plan. On the plus side, the deck in question was the ā€œBlue Moonā€ deck, which received a ton of hype and discussion. With the Top 8 finish, I would even say the buzz was deserving.

But Teferi? That’s what people buy out, honestly? After spiking to $30 on Saturday this card has already begun its decline. I listed a single copy on eBay to try and take advantage of this spike--no luck. My list price is down to $21.89 and still no takers. This card’s price will retract quickly and drastically. Granted, it’ll end up over $10, but I don’t expect TCG Mid to be over $20 by the summer.

Want a better play for the Blue Moon deck? How about the deck’s namesake, Blood Moon, which is a four-of in the deck! This card has been printed a ton, but it’s already moved up significantly and unlike Teferi, Mage of Zhalfir this price jump will stick. My advice: sell/trade away your Teferis immediately.

Amulet of Vigor +212%

Amulet

Anybody else sensing dƩjƠ vu with this buyout? Amulet of Vigor received a ton of hype a while back because of a tournament appearance, only to fall flat shortly thereafter. The story here is similar--significant buzz around this deck, followed by almost no mention come Sunday coverage.

But there is one key difference this time--the Amulet of Vigor, piloted by Matthias Hunt, did actually do fairly well during the Modern rounds. After all, the deck does show up as one with at least 18 points during the Modern rounds of the Pro Tour. The deck also looks like a ton of fun to play, and new players may flock to it due to the relatively low cost of entry (count ā€˜em: zero fetches and zero shocks).

My conclusion: this card overshot itself quite a bit by hitting $8 on TCG Player. This morning it’s already back down closer to $6, and the drop isn’t over yet. I expect this one to end up in the $4-$5 range for the short term.

But the long term will depend heavily on how well the deck does come this PTQ season. Being the wild card it is, there’s no way I can recommend anything other than selling into the hype here if you haven’t already. As for the 12 copies I purchased from ABU Games at $2.49 each, I plan on listing them eBay the evening they arrive in the mail in the hopes of making about a buck a copy after fees. That should indicate my confidence in their longevity.

Past In Flames + 167%

Past in Flames

See: Pyromancer Ascension. My attitudes towards this one are the same: not coming back down.

Hive Mind + 118%

Hive Mind

How was this card worth only $0.75? It had already proven its worth in Legacy combining with various Pacts and even Show and Tell to enable earlier wins. I am thrilled someone found a way to make the card also work in Modern. Now that Magic 2010 is a few years old, I can certainly see this card maintaining the higher price tag.

Once again, this card made its Modern debut in Matthias Hunt’s Amulet of Vigor deck. That is to say, the card likely received a ton of hype on Friday and Saturday only to have been a memory on Sunday. Nevertheless Hive Mind is a powerful spell and I suspect it will continue to be combined with Pacts to steal some victories in some form or another.

Now that the price has jumped to $3 I cannot advocate buying. I need more data before making such a call. But if you think you’ll be able to find these under $1 again (except maybe at LGS’s behind in their pricing) you may be disappointed.

Walk the Aeons + 113%

Walk the Aeons

Wait a second, is this really a Modern card? Well sort of. It seems a player on MTGO has been streaming a deck with this card to some success lately. It certainly didn’t get notice from the Pro Tour.

I know some players have been brewing with this sorcery for a while now, and the EDH crowd loves their Time Walks. This is a price jump that may retract slightly in the short term but will likely stick due to casual demand.

Honorable Mention

Those were the top non-token price jumps of last week. But there were many other noteworthy moves. Blood Moon is taking off as I mentioned before.

Azusa, Lost But Seeking was another mainstay of Matthias’ popular Modern deck. Her EDH popularity already hoisted her price tag up there but Modern playability only raises the ceiling further. I liked her under $20 but I can’t get behind a buy at any higher number.

Azusa

Other movers include Tolaria West, Angel's Grace, Lotus Bloom, Primeval Titan and Geist of Saint Traft. Splinter Twin and Snapcaster Mage seem especially well-positioned heading into Modern season, based on their rampant success at the Pro Tour.

You know what didn’t show up in most discussion threads? Faeries, Bitterblossom, Jund, Dark Confidant, Wild Nacatl. Interesting. It seems the most impactful B&R change Wizards made was the banning of Deathrite Shaman. Unbanning Bitterblossom and Wild Nacatl may have driven an initial price spikes. But their absence from Pro Tour Valencia discussion will lead to price retraction.

Overall I say Wizards made the right call with these Modern B&R changes. The format remains diverse and exciting to watch. There’s room to innovate and impact the metagame. I’m excited to see how the Modern format evolves from here.

In the meantime, I will gladly do the majority of my speculating and profiting in the Modern space due to the price swings, lower card availability and increasing popularity.

…

Sigbits

  • Walk the Aeons has been on a steady incline for a week or two now, but Star City Games has been reluctant to increase their price. I bought their last five copies at $1.49 and although they’re now ā€œsold outā€ they haven’t upped that price tag yet. If you have a shop that prices off Star City Games I highly recommend buying as many of these at $1.49 as you can.
  • Affinity made Top 8 at the Pro Tour despite Wild Nacatl’s unbanning. It seems Affinity may still be the aggro deck of choice. That bodes well for Inkmoth Nexus, which has been steadily rising over the past couple months. SCG only has five copies in stock--of any language. Expect a bump from $9.99 to $11.99 in the next week or two.
  • Birthing Pod continues to be a cornerstone of the Modern metagame. Retail prices are up to $9.99 on the powerful artifact. Foils are now triple their nonfoil counterparts, retailing for $29.99. This could be an indication that Modern is finally meriting a higher foil multiplier. Either that or the nonfoil version is due for a price bump!

#PTBNG: Matthias Hunt Amulet of Vigor Deck List

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Untitled Deck

Creatures

4 Azusa, Lost but Seeking
4 Primeval Titan
4 Serum VIsions
3 Simian Spirit Guide

Spells

4 Summoner's Pact
4 Amulet of Vigor
4 Summer Bloom
2 Pact of Negation
1 Slaughter Pact
2 Hive Mind

Lands

4 Simic Growth Chamber
3 Gruul Turf
1 Golgari Rot Farm
1 Boros Garrison
1 Selesnya Sanctuary
1 Sunhome, Fortress of the Legion
3 Tolaria West
1 Cavern of Souls
4 Gemstone Mine
3 City of Brass
1 Tendo Ice Bridge
2 Glimmerpost
1 Slayers' Stronghold
1 Vesuva
1 Forest

Sideboard

4 Seal of Primordium
3 Firespout
3 Leyline of Sanctity
1 Ghost Quarter
1 Bojuka Bog
1 Thragtusk
1 Chalice of the Void
1 Slaughter Pact

#PTBNG: Jeremy Dezani’s UWR Geist Deck List

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

Untitled Deck

Creatures

4 Geist of Saint Traft
2 Vendilion Clique
2 Restoration Angel
4 Snapcaster Mage

Spells

4 Lightning Bolt
4 Lightning Helix
4 Path to Exile
3 Spell Snare
3 Mana Leak
1 Remand
3 Cryptic Command
1 Electrolyze

Lands

2 Tectonic Edge
4 Celestial Colonnade
4 Arid Mesa
4 Scalding Tarn
2 Steam Vents
2 Hallowed Fountain
1 Sacred Foundry
2 Island
1 Mountain
1 Plains
2 Sulfur Falls

Sideboard

2 Anger of the Gods
2 Counterflux
1 Wear // Tear
2 Spellskite
1 Gideon Jura
2 Runed Halo
2 Rest in Peace
2 Stony Silence
1 Grafdigger's Cage

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