David Schumann continues his research on the impact of reprints on a card’s price. This time he looks at out-of-print cards reentering the Standard environment.
Meddling Mage
It’s time for Matthew Lewis’s review of every mythic rare in Dragon’s Maze. He discusses which are under- or overpriced and what to target.
David Schumann describes some playable Legacy cards that only get a little love, but with the right circumstances could jump to tier-one status.
Mike battled in the Modern GP in Chicago this weekend with Naya Pod. Read on to hear about his matches, and how a couple spicy singleton inclusions fared.
Chances are, you’re going to make a lot of money from RTR because you’re going to be actively reading and trading all through the next month or so. However, you have got to avoid losing money along the way, too! You don’t want to be stuck with Magic cards that you could have sold a few weeks ago for double the value.
Speculation depends on your ability to make and act on quick decisions, often within minutes or hours. Doug shares case studies that help develop basic predictive instincts.
Mike Hawthorne places 34th place in SCG’s Open Legacy tournament in Indianapolis, piloting New Horizons. Recap his nine rounds, learn a bit on sideboarding, and see the tweaks he’d make to the deck.
Ryan’s back, and he’s doing his thing reviewing the latest set for Commander and constructed goodies! Think you’ll agree with everything?
Joshua Justice takes a closer look at rares mythics and playable commons and uncommons with his set review of Innistrad.
Chad looks at some updates on Modern speculation and breaks down the finance behind drafting on MTGO.
Why read yet another article about Modern? Because Corbin Hosler digs deep into the format and comes back with some investments you definitely haven’t read about yet!
Darksteel, the second set in Mirrodin block, is notorious for driving off more Magic players than any other set, even the Urza block. It contained high-power cards for Affinity that did not require finesse to win with. It was like UG Madness in that the best deck was cheap, easy to play and frustrating to metagame against.