
Short-term, though, they will dip a little and then come back. The two early leaders, in terms of prices and decks built on EDHREC, are Zaxara, the Exemplary and Xyris, the Writhing Storm, both of which are over $10 right now and might hold a price close to that over the long term. Honestly, that’s my usual play, but the presale price I got for buying the decks blind was a little too good. The other cards in these decks are good, and the primary buyers here are folks who are savvy: they looked at the decklists, decided what they wanted to build/add to their decks, and are only buying targeted singles. Too many people are going to try and make money, and that’s not going to work. My point here is that the high tag on the Fierce cards won’t last short-term. Commander 2017 has an intriguing lineup, but remember that these cards are three years old and not one of these has had a reprint (except Teferi’s Protection, which has had two: Mystery Booster and a Judge Foil):

Last year’s big winner is Dockside Extortionist:Ĭommander 2018 has one card above $10: Arixmethes, Slumbering Isle.
#Commander 2020 free
While I do think this is the spell of the cycle I’d want to have most, and blue players truly love having yet another free counterspell in their armory, $40 is not a real price right now. It’s the main target to sell immediately, to Commander players who don’t have the sense to be patient in the middle of a pandemic. The prices are falling here, down at least 15% in the last week. Only Commander players want them, and while the green one is the worst (by FAR, and it’s nice to get back to Green cards being bad) the other four carry real prices…for now.įierce Guardianship ($40ish listed, but the lowest is $30 right now on TCG)

Simple, effective, and likely to push prices down. This year’s cycle avoids that by only being good if the Commander is in play. No, seriously, when Wizards makes something in these that’s Legacy-playable, then you’ve got GP New Jersey 2014 and Priest buylisting for $50, or Wizards needing to print extra copies of the whole Commander deck to get enough TNN out there. Wizards has wanted to avoid the True-Name Nemesis/Containment Priest problem, where a card meant for Commander warps older formats and causes outsize price and short supply. This product line is known for having a bunch of $2-$5 cards and a few special reprints/new cards to make it awesome, and this set follows that pattern.Ĭurrently, the most expensive reprint in the set is The Locust God, a card that was heading for $15 at a reasonable pace, but putting this in the ‘you want to pack in the Wheel of Fortune’ effects deck is why this won’t hit $20.īut the new cards are the headliners this time around, with a cycle that’s genius: It’s free if your Commander is in play.

If you find them someplace for $40 each, that’s a pretty easy buy. This has led to a very artificial set of prices, and I want to dive in and see if there’s money to be made from buying and cracking sealed product this weekend.įirst of all: Profitability is heavily dependent on the price you acquire the decks at. We’ve had to sit through a big delay in having the cards in hand, and even more delay in playing with other people. (I’ve got a set coming to me on Sunday, UPS willing!) Commander 2020 is legal to sell as of today! Your local store may or may not have them available, and maybe they are being shipped to you.
