Is Vintage a stale format? Scott Fielder believes there are many underplayed cards and lots of room for brewing. Today he showcases several unconventional decklists.
Deathrite Shaman
Alexander Carl takes a look at some common speculation mistakes and what we can learn from them to improve our returns.
Adam goes over results from the first Magic Online Vintage Premier Event, noting a few interesting Vintage card choices.
David Schumann breaks down the Legacy metagame from 2014 so far, outlining which decks performed best and explaining their fundamental strategies.
Legacy and Vintage have the highest return on investment on MTGO right now, and Ryan proposes a wallet friendly Burn list for you to put some virtual sleeves on and win some packs with.
Adam shares results from resent Japanese Modern tournaments and explores a Modern deck list that might be ahead of the curve.
Warren Buffet’s famous advice “Be Fearful When Others Are Greedy and Greedy When Others Are Fearful” may hold up well on Wall Street, but fundamentals are a bit different in MTG Finance. Sigmund makes some hard decisions this week as he looks through a Modern portfolio of decaying value.
David Schumann covers the juiciest RTR cards to target at rotation this year. These cards will be dropping like stones, and unlikely to be on most players’ minds.
Ryan took Grixis Keeper to the finals of a Minnesota Vintage tournament. With Vintage Masters being so hot, now’s the time to consider what to play in constructed Vintage!
Danny Brown continues his discussion from last week about moving into Eternal staples while they’re Standard-legal, with yet more examples.
Standard rotation brings many prices to their lowest. Through some examples of his Nine Months of Portfolio Management series, Sylvain exposes which cards are likely to constitute good investments when fall comes.
Ryan competed in this past weekend’s SCG tournaments. On a last minute whim and revelation, he decided to run Izzet in the Legacy Open. Check out his deck list and recommendations for improvement.
When similar cards have different prices, one of them is often ripe for a correction. Jason Alt discusses how to look for these discrepancies and get ahead of the market.