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DarthFerret
Guest
I actually have a deck that is composed entirely of foils (land too). I call it the pretty deck, and with my limited supply of foils it does surprisingly well.
Who or what is that?Modus Pwnens said:A certain Wafo-Tapa disagrees with you
The bottom line is that the value of the content of an average booster goes up. This means that it's more profitable to buy packs than it is to buy singles. Wizards is pushing the local market nowadays (witnessed by the new Play program, and on the other hand by the cancellation of a pro tour and states = less focus on the tourney scene), and this seems to connect in that aspect. Smart.According to MaRo’s numerical breakdown of the new structure, a mythic rare in a big set will be like getting a Tenth Edition rare (or a Timeshifted card); a rare in a big set will be like getting a rare from Future Sight.
Probability of getting a mythic rare in a random pack of Shards of Alara: (1 in 8) = 12.5%
Probability of getting a specific mythic rare: (1 in 15 x 12.5%) = 0.83%
As was noted above, the likelihood of getting any specific Timeshifted card was 0.82%.
Probability of getting a rare in a random pack of Shards of Alara: (7 in 8) = 87.5%
Probability of getting a specific rare: (1 in 53 x 87.5%) = 1.65%
Probability of getting a specific rare in Future Sight: (1 in 60) = 1.66%
So that was an easy little math session to at least show that MaRo’s assertion that mythic rares are about twice as rare as regular rares was correct - in that any specific mythic rare is twice as rare as any specific rare. You’re still going to only open a mythic rare in every eighth pack or so.
So where do we take this information, from a budget perspective? Do we assume that each mythic rare is going to cost, on average, twice as much as it would have had it just been a regular rare? And if that is the case, is it better to actually start buying packs and boxes rather than buying singles?
We know Planeswalkers are going to be mythic. Let’s assume, for the sake of argument, that the average price of a current Planewalker will be half the average price of the 15 mythic rares in Shards of Alara. The average price here on StarCityGames of the five Planewalkers is $9.40, making the average mythic rare cost $18.80. The average price of a Lorwyn rare on StarCityGames is $3.64.
36 packs in a box, 1 in 8 will have a mythic rare: 4.5 mythic rares per box. The other 31.5 packs (yes, I know there’s no such thing as a half-pack, but this is for averaging purposes, so just push the “I Trust Math” button, okay?) will have rares. (4.5 x $18.80) + (31.5 x $3.64) = $199.06.
… I think I just proved that a box of Lorwyn, with mythic rares, would have returned about a 100% profit on the cost of a box. Pardon me while my head asplode. And I think I just came to the conclusion that buying packs of Shards of Alara should, on average, give you a better investment of your money than buying singles.
This is, of course, where the randomness (and the swinginess of the secondary market) rears its ugly head. Because there are 53 rares in Shards of Alara, you aren’t guaranteed to get enough of the $20 rares (or the rares you want) to categorically say that buying a box is a more worthwhile investment than buying singles. Believe me, I’ve opened enough Ice Caves in my time to know the Actual Worth of any given box is just as swingy as the singles market.
Why are we assuming that they'll be that much? The article had already stated that it's rarer to pull a specific Mythic rare than a specific Timeshifted card. Why must we assume that the rares will be bottom-line worth the same as the average of a highly utilized cycle of cards (for a few of them, anyway)?article said:We know Planeswalkers are going to be mythic. Let’s assume, for the sake of argument, that the average price of a current Planewalker will be half the average price of the 15 mythic rares in Shards of Alara. The average price here on StarCityGames of the five Planewalkers is $9.40, making the average mythic rare cost $18.80.
Wiz Co. isn't interested in the secondary market, right?Ransac said:This is all based off of assumption, though.
Why are we assuming that they'll be that much? The article had already stated that it's rarer to pull a specific Mythic rare than a specific Timeshifted card. Why must we assume that the rares will be bottom-line worth the same as the average of a highly utilized cycle of cards (for a few of them, anyway)?
I can't imagine that the Planeswalkers in Alara will be more functional that the current planeswalkers for the fact that they'll be multi-colored. Garruk can be thrown in any deck that has green in it, while this new R/G planeswalker MUST have Red AND Green in the deck.
I still stand by my claim that prices will not shoot up as high as everyone think they will.
Ransac, cpa trash man
Not primarily, but they must see they can influence their own (primary) sales by influencing the secondary market.Killer Joe said:Wiz Co. isn't interested in the secondary market, right?
There is a huge flaw in his reasoning. He's assuming that the average value of a normal rare will remain the same as the average value of a normal rare in Llorowin. If the value of a Mythic rare increases, the value of a normal rare will decrease.Shabbaman said:I just read a very nice article on mythic rares. I encourage you to read it. Of course you probably won't, so I'll just copy paste the juicy bit:
The bottom line is that the value of the content of an average booster goes up. This means that it's more profitable to buy packs than it is to buy singles. Wizards is pushing the local market nowadays (witnessed by the new Play program, and on the other hand by the cancellation of a pro tour and states = less focus on the tourney scene), and this seems to connect in that aspect. Smart.
So, what do you make of this then?MaRo said:Which leads to the next question: Will mythic rares have premium (foil) versions? Yes. In fact, not only will they have a normal version and a premium version, but the premium versions will show up at a slightly more frequent ratio. (The number of combined premium rares and premium mythic rares you will get starting with Shards of Alara is higher than the number of premium rares you currently get.)
I think you're right about rare devaluation, but I don't think it'll be because of the value of mythics. To collect playsets of mythics, you need to buy more packs that you do now (more than 0 ). So I'd say the supply of normal rares will increase (more packs!), so the value will drop. Just a hunch.EricBess said:If the value of a Mythic rare increases, the value of a normal rare will decrease.
That was my point. It's cause-effect. The value of rares goes down because there are more of a specific rare available compared to the number of mystic rares available.Shabbaman said:I think you're right about rare devaluation, but I don't think it'll be because of the value of mythics. To collect playsets of mythics, you need to buy more packs that you do now (more than 0 ). So I'd say the supply of normal rares will increase (more packs!), so the value will drop. Just a hunch.