Magic predated (and in some ways opened the door for) the American hobby game explosion in the 2000s. Nowadays you look at something like this and if it's a game people can play often enough you expect them to pay $100 a year (like, say, two Dominion expansions annually) but at that point the growth was in small games you could sell at a checkout counter for ten bucks. A starter fit their expectations of the market they knew about better.
Well, there's ways they could give them away to employees without falling afoul of tax laws or anything.
Thanks, and could you guys explain what you are talking about with the conversation about held back cards?
Also, the art on those cards is great. I assume "P" means prerelease?
Thanks, and could you guys explain what you are talking about with the conversation for held back cards?
Also, the art on those cards is great. I assume "P" means prerelease?
Love the art in those Ixalan leaks. Walk the Plank is a very cool card and the full art is nice
I think the vampire is fine. Just not Titan-level good
I don't know how people expect to see a functional reprint of the Titan cycle anyway. Those cards are pretty not-okay to have around.
I'd say Skysovereign came rather close to Inferno Titan
they'd probably want to avoid making another Grave, Sun, and especially Primeval Titan
They made a fixed Prime Titan too, in Shadows.
There are no problematic gearhulksYeah, the Red and Blue Titans were the most "fair", which I guess is why they decided Torrential Gearhulk needs to be the least fair of the Hulks. (Of course the Red one is still underwhelming and the Green one is still problematic, because that's their color identities.)
What's kind of crazy is that Grave Titan was the most on-the-nose powerful Titan, and saw the least amount of Standard play in it's life in the format.
I'm not going to pretend Primeval Titan isn't powerful in the abstract, but the fact that it could fetch creature lands and Kessig Wolf Run and life gain lands had a lot to do with how ridiculous it was. And we had access to two-mana non-creature ramp at the time. Geez that Standard feels closer to Modern powerful than Standard in hindsight.
Kessig Wolf Run didn't exist when Primeval Titan was printed. It was the "best" because it was fetching up Eldrazi Temple/Eye of Ugin in Eldrazi ramp decks, and Valakut/Mountains in Valakut decks.
Constructed: 1.0
Would shroud really have been too much to ask for? As is, this Titan doesn't even net you a whole card when you play it, and its ability doesn't really protect it by the time you get around to playing it.
I was going by ramp on a stick.Hour of Promise kinda feels closer to it than Ulvenwald Hydra.
Thanks, and could you guys explain what you are talking about with the conversation for held back cards?
Geez that Standard feels closer to Modern powerful than Standard in hindsight.
Kessig Wolf Run didn't exist when Primeval Titan was printed. It was the "best" because it was fetching up Eldrazi Temple/Eye of Ugin in Eldrazi ramp decks, and Valakut/Mountains in Valakut decks.
Creatures (14)
3 Solemn Simulacrum
2 Frost Titan
2 Phantasmal Image
4 Primeval Titan
1 Snapcaster Mage
2 Thragtusk
Lands (26)
5 Forest
4 Island
1 Mountain
2 Cavern of Souls
4 Copperline Gorge
4 Glimmerpost
4 Hinterland Harbor
1 Inkmoth Nexus
1 Kessig Wolf Run
Spells (20)
1 Blasphemous Act
3 Bonfire of the Damned
4 Farseek
4 Ponder
4 Rampant Growth
4 Temporal Mastery
Sideboard
2 Thragtusk
2 Beast Within
3 Crushing Vines
2 Negate
1 Karn Liberated
1 Blasphemous Act
2 Whipflare
2 Cavern of Souls
What? Wolf Run Blue was certainly a deck that used both Wolf Run and Titan.
http://sales.starcitygames.com/deckdatabase/displaydeck.php?DeckID=48345
You had Lightning Bolt, Path to Exile, Terminate, Maelstrom Pulse, Day of Judgment all in the same Standard format at some point. It was my first experience with Magic. Am I missing another removal spell from back then?
You had Lightning Bolt, Path to Exile, Terminate, Maelstrom Pulse, Day of Judgment all in the same Standard format at some point. It was my first experience with Magic. Am I missing another removal spell from back then?
You had Lightning Bolt, Path to Exile, Terminate, Maelstrom Pulse, Day of Judgment all in the same Standard format at some point. It was my first experience with Magic. Am I missing another removal spell from back then?
BlightningYou had Lightning Bolt, Path to Exile, Terminate, Maelstrom Pulse, Day of Judgment all in the same Standard format at some point. It was my first experience with Magic. Am I missing another removal spell from back then?
Blightning
Destroy target Planeswalker. Owner discards two cards.
Just realised that Walk The Plank is a sorcery. Boo!
I mean, you do have to take the time to get them and tie them up, and it just isn't worthwhile unless you have them walk off slowly.
Wotc keeps a bunch of their own stock for various reasons, card archives essentially, but they also have to pretend any card in a booster pack is worth nothing more than a fraction of said boosters price.
Something to do with gambling laws.
Couple years ago Wizards had a promotion going that they put cards from their own stock that they had pledged not to reprint into a few Zendikar boosters.
WotC basically has a ton of old cards from most older sets sitting around for various reasons. They don't as I understand it keep like a really thorough and well-organized archive, but it's still something that would be staggering compared to most individual people's collections.
"P" means promo and are usually for pre-release and in store tournaments. They are usually have either alternate or full card art.
So the fear is they could release them and tank the market? But if they put them in boosters it's not "gambling."
I played my first live game today with a Welcome Deck of Black/Green. It becomes obvious pretty quickly that if you don't know how the cards interact, you are at an instant disadvantage. The other player was really patient and explained some of the things I missed/what would have been better to play.
There were also two tourney players there testing their Aggro and Control decks for a GP in Washington D.C. Cool to see, but fuck if I knew what was going on. lol
the cool part is that you can make dinosaurs walk the plank
the weird part is that you can make krakens and leviathans walk the plank
you must have misunderstood something, there is no fear. Especially with Magic depending a great deal on the secondary market. The thing is Wotc participating in it would be unethical considering they directly control supply.So the fear is they could release them and tank the market? But if they put them in boosters it's not "gambling."
So the fear is they could release them and tank the market?
*The possible exception is stuff that's not for public consumption -- for example, there was a test print run called "Summer Magic" that was never supposed to be publicly released but accidentally shipped a few cases out, but currently people think more than half the supply came from WotC employees.
Never heard of this. What happened there?
the sad part is that you can't make everybody walk the dinosaur
https://mtg.gamepedia.com/Revised_Edition#Summer_Magic
They made a version of revised to fix some issues (like Senerb Efreet having the wrong art), but it ended up having more issues- like the infamous Blue Hurricane- and was supposed to be destroyed, but a small amount ended up getting shipped out
It should be around September 15th or 16th. Then of course you have the pre-release on September 23rd and 24th which you dont want to miss.
you must have misunderstood something, there is no fear.
MtG is a product also intended for kids something gambling laws do a great deal to protect for and as such Wizards in general tries their hardest not to acknowledge anything that could associate the two.
They assuredly don't have remotely enough of anything* to actually make a dent in the market. There isn't much in terms of normal sets where there's enough that plausibly exists for it to majorly swing prices.
In terms of acknowledging the secondary market it's not as simple as "gambling laws." Most statutes covering gambling are reasonably specific about what qualifies and you're not going to stumble into one by talking about your product a specific way. Most of the things people are typically hoping for when they want WotC employees to discuss the secondary market are also probably, on their own, fine for them to do.
that's a good contender for the next thread title, btw