• STORE
  • EVENTS
  • ARTICLES
  • NEWS
  • DECKS
  • BUYLIST
  • HELP
Advanced Search
Deck Builder
  • Hello. Sign In.
    YOUR ACCOUNT

    forgot your password?

    New customer? Start here!

  • CART

    View Cart ( items)

    Checkout

  • WISH
    LIST
       
  • Magic Singles
    • English
    • Foil English
    • Non-English
    • Foil Non-English
    • BGS/Graded Cards
    • Complete Sets
    • Misprints and Rarities
    • Wholesale Lots
  • Magic Sealed Product
    • Expansion Sets
    • Booster Packs
    • Booster Boxes
    • Starter & Tourn. Packs
    • Starter & Tourn. Displays
    • Theme Decks
    • Event Decks
    • Intro Packs
    • Fat Packs
    • Two-Player Games
    • Standalone Sets
    • Archenemy
    • Commander
    • Duel Decks
    • From the Vault
    • Planechase
    • Premium Deck Series
    • Misc. Box Sets
    • Non-English Sealed
  • Gaming Supplies
    • Binders
    • Books & Fat Pack Guides
    • Boxes & Bags
    • Clothing
    • Deck Boxes
    • Dice
    • Life Counters
    • Playmats
    • Sleeves
  • Specialty Items
    • Ascension
    • Gift Cards
    • Lithographs
    • Original Artwork
  • Digital Products
    • Grinder: The Brad Nelson Story
    • Next Level Magic
    • OMG: Official Miser's Guide
    • Tha Gatherin'
  • We Buy

Open The Vaults

Chas Andres
8/20
#Finance 
  •  
  •  

Gosh we sure are a pile of entitled snobs aren't we?

As someone who wrote an article last year about From the Vault: Legends entitled 'From the Vault: Disappointing' I was actually pretty shocked at how mixed the community reactions were to Wizards' latest edition to the series. I remember last summer when Aaron Forsythe got up on the stage at PAX and promised us a return to form after From the Vaults: Legends everyone was pumped. But judging by the reactions on my Twitter feed yesterday the majority of you believe that he failed to deliver.

You guys are wrong.

The only bar that From the Vault: Realms fails to clear is the invisible one that you made up. Lands after all are often the most expensive part of any Magic deck and there were lots of cards that could have been reprinted here that would have been total game changers. I assume that some of you were imagining walking into a retail store and picking up a box that had a foil Wasteland Karakas or even a set of Onslaught fetchlands. Heck even a shockland or two with the Return to Ravnica expansion symbol on them would have likely been met with a daylong dance party at Gen Con.

Instead we got in the words of a friend "Maze Urborg Vesuva and a pile of garbage."

If you are in the camp of players and traders who believe that I urge you to take a deep breath and actually look at what we're getting. Remember why you were so excited to get a set of lands in the first place? Because nothing holds value like lands do.

Take Strip Mine for example. That card isn't even legal in anything except Vintage and it's been reprinted a bunch of times over the years. Yet the foil printing in From the Vault: Exiled is up to $20! Even random durdle lands from old sets have way more value than most of the spells do. Miren the Moaning Well is a $6 card with a $30 foil. Kor Haven is $6 and $50. Tower of the Magistrate is $10 and $60. These are all marginal cards with okay abilities and they're worth way more than you probably thought because people can jam them into their deck instead of a basic.

Of course the value of a set like this is more complex than simply pointing out lands from the past that are good. Let's take a look and see how it measures up historically.

Marquee History

Right now the first two From the Vault sets—Dragons and Exiled—sell on StarCityGames.com for $150 sealed. Relics is a little less pricy—you can pick one up for just $120—and Legends is downright cheap at just $80 retail.

Realms is already selling higher than Legends and I expect that will remain the case. The preorder price is $100 but it's sold out. The cheapest 'Buy It Now' option on eBay for what it's worth is a whopping $130.

Much of that is hype and bluster but several auctions did actually sell in the $100-$110 range last night. While I expect the price of a sealed From the Vault: Realms to dip below $100 once copies actually hit the market the long term price for this set should be far stronger than last year's disappointing offering.

Last year I compared the contents of From the Vault: Legends with the cards in the other three sets and quickly realized that From the Vault: Legends' biggest problem was the lack of a marquee card. Dragons had Nicol Bolas who still retails at a whopping $40 despite seeing play exactly nowhere. Exiled did it one better giving us a $50 Berserk. Relics had Mox Diamond at $30 which everyone was very happy with. Legends gave us…Progenitus at $20.

Of course those prices don't tell us everything. People loved the Nicol Bolas reprinting because it put an amazing new face on a classic legend. Exiled gave us access to a $100 card that most players couldn't dream of playing with until the reprinting. Relics virtually doubled the amount of Mox Diamonds available dropping the price of a $40 card that was a very tricky four-of to get for Legacy. Legends…gave us more copies of a card that was easy to pick up for $10. Also the new art was awful. Did I mention how terrible From the Vault: Legends is?

So how does Realms stack up?

I would argue that Maze of Ith is at least tied with Berserk for the top spot on this list. If Nicol Bolas were released today tournament players would be howling that they were robbed and Commander/Cube players would be equally bummed that the 'best' card in the set was an unplayable Elder Dragon. Mox Diamond was nice for the Legacy crowd but the card did very little for the casual contingent. Berserk was great for beatdown players of all shapes and sizes but even that card is far more of a fringe playable than Maze of Ith. Berserk and Mox Diamond also have the 'drawback' of needing a playset to be useful. With Maze of Ith you can do a lot with a single copy.

It's true; Maze of Ith doesn't have as many Legacy implications as something like Karakas. Getting more of those into circulation would have been nice. But Karakas is kind of a useless card to anyone who doesn't play Legacy—it's banned in Commander—while Maze of Ith is something that almost everyone has a use for. Not only does it see some Legacy play but it goes in nearly every cube and Commander deck ever made. There's a reason this foil is preselling at $50 and SCG hasn't dropped the price of their original copies—Maze is a hot card. Heck I traded a played copy of Maze for full $50 retail last week and had multiple other offers on it at the time.

But what will the new printing do to the value of Maze of Ith? Should you trade your copies now?

The Drop

Depending on who you ask getting reprinted in a From the Vault set either has no effect on the value of a card or a major effect. We could argue about that all day but I'd rather take a look at the numbers and see if any trends start to emerge.

Here's the Black Lotus Project price chart for Mox Diamond. The red arrow points to the date when From the Vault: Relics came out:

Chart 1

Based on this it doesn't look like the set's release did much to the price of the card. That said Mox Diamond was spoiled a few months earlier so it's very likely that the price drop leading up to the set's release had a lot to do with the tumble it took all summer long.

Unfortunately it's hard to tell what happened here in retrospect. Was that a soft summer for Legacy? Did fewer decks need Diamonds after that point? Results are inconclusive.

What about Sol Ring another card in From the Vault: Relics?

Chart 2

Interesting. Not only did the set's release have no release on the price of this card it looks as if the additional copies drove the price up once everyone realized that the FTV allocations wouldn't satisfy demand for the card.

Incidentally the giant crash you see mid-2011 is the release of the Commander precons. This chart is actually one of the more interesting ones I've found and it seems to indicate there might be some sort of 'tipping point' phenomenon where demand finally outstrips supply and the market for a card crashes all at once. This is probably worth exploring further some other time.

But I digress. Let's do one more in From the Vault: Relics:

Chart 3

Again it looks like the reprinting didn't do much to the value of the original card. It may have slowed its growth but if you owned a set of Vials in the summer of 2010 they're pretty much worth the same amount today.

All of these charts simply reinforce what we already knew about supply and demand. Some cards like Sol Ring and Aether Vial have so much demand behind them that a limited release of additional copies won't drop the price. It might retard further price inflation but it won't kill the value.

Other cards have their price more rooted in rarity and these released have a profound effect on them. Mox Diamond for example was much more difficult to find than Sol Ring in the years before this set came out. But while the increased supply of Sol Rings didn't feed all the demand for the card it did pretty much mean that everyone who wanted a set of Mox Diamonds could get one. Thus the price started to stagnate and drop.

This goes double for cards that are even rarer like Sun Quan Lord of Wu. Even though the retail price of the Portal Three Kingdoms version is still $15 no one will ever trade for your copy at anything approaching that. I've had one sitting in my trade pile for over a year now and haven't gotten so much as a nibble.

This is also somewhat true for foil cards.

Unfortunately there aren't pretty charts for the value of foils. Pricing data on these from several years back is nearly impossible to find so I had to break out my Google-fu to see what I could find.

In October 2009 a foil Aether Vial from Darksteel was worth about $25 retail roughly what it is today. In the months leading up to Relics however that foil was up—way up—into the $50 range. I do believe that had this set never come out that foil would still be worth many times as much as the non-foil copy.

Set foils generally hold a premium over promotional cards. For example a normal Sensei's Divining Top is worth $15. The From the Vaults foil goes for $30. The near mint set foil from Champions of Kamigawa? That's sold out at $50.

Not only do most eternal players consider the set foil to be the more 'pimp' version but many casual cube builders (like me!) vastly prefer the original art and feel. These cards will always hold a premium—the only question is how large that premium is.

There are a ton of players who simply enjoy foils. These people don't really care where their four copies of Aether Vial come from and are more than happy to snap up the much cheaper promos. Once a promotional set like this comes out demand for the originals softens up because all of these people are able to foil out their Legacy decks or cubes without having to drop $50 on the set foil. Even if the retail price stays high trading these cards at full value becomes nearly impossible because the pool of buyers goes down by more than half.

So we know then that the From the Vault: Relics printing didn't hurt Sol Ring's price nor did it seem to affect Aether Vial. But it did lower the value of Mox Diamond as well as the Darksteel Foil Aether Vial.

Since there are no easy answers I think we should examine all of the cards in From the Vault: Realms one at a time and see if we can predict how things will shake out.

Maze of Ith

  • Current Price (set card): $49.99
  • Current Price (FTV Foil): $49.99
  • Current Price (Judge Foil): $179.99

Maze of Ith is the marquee card in this set. Unlike Berserk and Mox Diamond where players with no use for the card were happy to trade them to the Legacy crowd very few players who buy this are going to part with their Mazes. This is going to make for a smaller supply of this card than most people think.

The Dark copies of Maze of Ith have been stable for a while now and I don't expect that to change. I do however see a drop in price for the judge foil. While the judge foil still has unique—and amazing—art it is now no longer the only foil copy of this card available and the demand will soften considerably. I predict that this card will settle more in the $100-$120 range over the next year or so.

If the retail price of this card drops at all from $50 I recommend aggressively trading for these and holding them for a while. To me the floor on this foil is $50 and the ceiling is $70-$80.

Urborg Tomb of Yawgmoth

  • Current Price (set card): $19.99
  • Current Price (FTV Foil): $19.99
  • Current Price (Set Foil): $59.99

It is common for these promo foils to start out at the same price as the set card only to grow apart over time. The demand for Urborg Tomb of Yawgmoth is lower than that of Maze of Ith and I'd bet this release will temporarily drop the price of the set card down to $15 or so. I also think that this will drop the set foil price considerably—my guess is that it will be $39.99 before long.

Eventually though this promo should sell for $5-$10 more than the set card. Urborg has many uses in all legal formats and if the original stays in the $20 range the foil should hit $30 without too much of a problem.

Grove of the Burnwillows

  • Current Price (set card): $12.99
  • Current Price (FTV Foil): $14.99
  • Current Price (set foil): $29.99

Obviously this card would be much more exiting if Punishing Fire hadn't gotten the axe in Modern but it's still legal in Legacy and I have no doubt other combos with this card will pop up at some point. Demand for this one is likely going to be low for a while but it will pick up again once this card returns to some sort of tournament relevance.

Price-wise I expect it to be stable or dip into the $8-$10 range—demand for Grove is pretty low these days. The set foil is probably safe at $30.

Ancient Tomb

  • Current Price (set card): $9.99
  • Current Price (FTV Foil): Unlisted

This is Ancient Tomb's first foil release. It's a four-of in Legacy and a Cube staple. Don't sleep on this one.

While I don't know what retail price this card will debut at I expect it to be a $20+ card long term. Being the only foil version of a tournament staple is huge and this will be the card I will be most aggressively trying to acquire on release day. I expect many casual players won't have a use for it but my sweet (terrible) Robot deck in Legacy uses four of them and my cube runs it so I'll need at least five copies.

Vesuva

  • Current Price (set card): $9.99
  • Current Price (FTV Foil): $9.99
  • Current Price (Set Foil): $34.99

For those of you who dislike this set…

The fifth-most-valuable card in Dragons is a tie at $7.99: Thunder Dragon Bladewing the Risen Dragonstorm and Rith the Awakener. In Exiled it's Lotus Petal at $12.99. In Relics it's Isochron Scepter and Sword of Body and Mind at $9.99. In Legends it's a bunch of stuff at $5.99.

Wouldn't you trade any of those cards straight up for a foil Vesuva? I sure would.

Forgetting for a moment the insanity of the Modern bubble and the Cloudpost banning Vesuva has been a pretty steady grower in the $6-$10 range over the past couple years. While it doesn't currently have too many tournament applications it's always on the verge of being broken while remaining a solid casual card. Noticing the trend? All three of the cards we've seen so far are great casual cards that are also playable and decent in tournament Magic. For those of you who think this set lacks cohesion here it is. It is trying to appeal to the broadest player base possible.

The art on this card is amazing especially in foil. I expect it will continue to steadily rise in value probably into the $10-$15 range over the next few years staying $5 or so ahead of the set card. The set foil isn't outrageously priced either and it shouldn't drop too much from where it's at—perhaps into the $25-$30 range.

High Market

  • Current Price (set card): $6.99
  • Current Price (FTV Foil): $7.99
  • Current Price (set foil): $59.99

No chance this set foil is going to stay at sixty freaking dollars even if it does have the old border. Commander players who want to pimp out their decks have another option now.

I do think this is one of the more underrated cards in the set and I'd expect it to hit $14.99 long term. I love that this made the set because it'll help introduce the card to a whole new group of Commander players who have been missing out.

Forbidden Orchard

  • Current Price (set card): $5.99
  • Current Price (FTV Foil): $7.99
  • Current Price (set foil): $24.99

This is the first big miss in the set for me. Forbidden Orchard was an integral part of the old Oath decks but much like Grove it's a combo card that doesn't seem to have much use right now. Casual players aren't going to like the drawback and tournament players are going to shove it in the back of their binders and forget it. Couldn't this have been say Rishadan Port instead?

This card's best uses are in Vintage where the set foil will reign supreme so I expect that one to stay at $24.99. This version will probably drop to $5 or so unless it finds a new home.

Cephalid Coliseum

  • Current Price (set card): $4.99
  • Current Price (FTV Foil): $6.99
  • Current Price (set foil): $12.99

One of my local game stores is Knightware in Studio City which is home to many of the largest Legacy tournaments in Southern California. There also isn't too much of a Standard scene. Because of that local players who probably wouldn't consider Legacy otherwise are drawn to play the format.

This means that cards for 'budget' Legacy decks like Dredge are much hotter here than most other places. I can never keep Cephalid Coliseums in my binder for more than a couple weeks.

Players aren't going to want to run a single foil Coliseum though so these will only trade well in the first couple of days (to people building playsets) or as a playset later on. If no one at your LGS goes for a set or two I recommend getting four of them together and then trying to move them all at once.

I don't expect this release to change the price of the other versions of this card at all.

Windbrisk Heights

  • Current Price (set card): $4.99
  • Current Price (FTV Foil): 4.99
  • Current Price (set foil): $9.99

Did you have any idea the regular set version of this card was still $4.99? I sure didn't. I remember when it was destroying Standard though so perhaps it has some Modern application. If so these foils are worth thinking about. At any rate these promos generally end up being worth at least 25% more than the set version so this could end up more in the $6-$7 range. More likely though the set version will drop a little as the market gets more saturated.

Boseiju Who Shelters All

  • Current Price (set card): $4.99
  • Current Price (FTV Foil): 4.99
  • Current Price (set foil): $19.99

The land foil premium strikes again! I remember trading for one of these set foils at a GP a while back. The guy valued it at $6 but told me it wasn't for trade. I asked him if he'd trade it to me if I gave him double the retail price. He agreed and I still ended up with a nice deal on a card I run in Commander.

That said this seems like the sort of set foil that primed to fall thanks to the new release. I wouldn't be shocked if the price of this card overall takes a bit of a tumble.

Dryad Arbor

  • Current Price (set card): $2.99
  • Current Price (FTV Foil): 3.99
  • Current Price (set foil): $21.99

This is $1 less than Boseiju…why exactly?

Not only does Dryad Arbor see a ton more play in both Modern and Legacy this new version of it is absolutely stellar. The art is jaw dropping and the templating is totally unique in the game of Magic. I'm picking these up without question and I'd expect it to be an $8-$10 foil easily. I also expect the set foil to drop because this version is so much cooler.

Glacial Chasm

  • Current Price (set card): $0.75
  • Current Price (FTV Foil): $3.99

Now is a good time to remind you all of The Valakut Principle.

Back during Zendikar block Valakut spent a good amount of time as one-of if not the best deck. Despite that trading copies of the actual card Valakut the Molten Pinnacle was incredibly difficult. The card was only worth about $2 and it was stuck in my binder forever. Why was this?

Valakut Decks required Primeval Titan to function. Without that jolly green giant the deck didn't really work. And at the time Primeval Titans sold for $40+ dollars. Thus anyone who wanted to make the deck had to shell out a ton of cash and the barrier of entry was high. People who couldn't afford Titans wouldn't trade for Valakuts and the people who could afford Titans generally already had their playsets of the $2 rare.

Glacial Chasm is a very narrow card. It's sometimes run as a one-of in Legacy Lands which is barely a real deck. The bigger problem is that the deck really does require The Tabernacle at Pendrell Vale to work. And that card sells for a whopping $325.00 in near mint condition.

What I'm saying is if you find someone who will take this card off your hands at any price do it. You will see these rotting in binders for the next ten years.

Murmuring Bosk

  • Current Price (set card): $3.49
  • Current Price (FTV Foil): $2.99
  • Current Price (set foil): $9.99

Have you noticed this comes with a Forest watermark? It's very cool and I bet it looks great in person.

This land sees play from time to time so keep an eye on it. I'd expect the set version will drop to $1.99 as the market floods a bit but it'll jump the next time Wizards releases a decent Treefolk or two. I also would never count out Doran in modern.

Desert

  • Current Price (set card): $1.99
  • Current Price (FTV Foil): $1.99

It's too bad Camel is immune to these because that's pretty much the only thing holding Desert back.

As it is I'd honestly rather be stuck with the desert from Settlers of Catan.

Shivan Gorge

  • Current Price (set card): $1.49
  • Current Price (FTV Foil): $1.99

The new art is great. Too bad no one will ever use this card in a real game of Magic.

Conclusions

Not only do I think this From the Vault set is good I expect it will only grow in value over time. The great thing about lands is how universally desirable they are—the demand for them is higher than any other type of card.

Long term I like Maze of Ith Urborg Tomb of Yawgmoth High Market Vesuva Grove of the Burnwillows Cephalid Coliseum and Dryad Arbor to maintain or increase in value over the long term. I would pick these cards up and hang on to them for a year at least. Even random cards like Boseiju Who Shelters All might end up surprising us—lands are just that good.

I would set my personal buy price for this set around $75 and I would set my sale price around $110. Long term I expect this to be up there with From the Vault: Exiled—multiple cards will stabilize over $20 a marquee card will be at least $50 and the set will retail for a solid $150.

It may not have the Wasteland or Karakas you were dreaming on but you're missing out if you ignore this set.

Until next time–

–Chas Andres

  •  
  •  
#Finance 
« Previous Article
Dear Azami - Look To The Skies
Next Article »
Return To Ravnica: Warning Spoilers!

About Chas Andres

Chas Andres is a Los Angeles-based screenwriter who has, at times, supported himself exclusively on income gained by buying, selling, and trading Magic cards. He also traded a pack of Zendikar up to an Alpha Mox Sapphire, which he thinks was pretty freaking sweet. Aside from his undying love of Magic, Chas is an avid fan of rock and roll music, the great game of baseball, and all of those cult TV shows that got cancelled before their time.

chasandres

Read more by
Chas Andres



ORGANIZED PLAY
  • THIS WEEKEND
  • NEXT WEEKEND
  • +
  • THIS Saturday, May 25
  • OPEN Dallas/Fort Worth, TX
  • Super IQ Indian Trail, NC - Be There Games
  • Super IQ Orlando, FL - The Game Academy
  • IQ Duluth, MN - Berserkson!
  • IQ Tallahassee, FL - Gamescape
  • IQ Valley Stream, NY - Mark's Comics & Collectibles
  • IQ Tempe, AZ - Pop Culture Paradise
  • IQ Eau Claire, WI - Nomad Game Center
  • THIS Sunday, May 26
  • OPEN Dallas/Fort Worth, TX
  • Super IQ Tallahassee, FL - Gamescape
  • IQ Farmingdale, NY - Empire Gaming & Comics
  • Saturday, June 1
  • OPEN Baltimore, MD
  • Super IQ Denver, CO - Denver Comic Con!
  • IQ Columbus, OH - Comic Town
  • IQ Louisville, KY - Bluegrass Magic
  • IQ St. Louis, MO - Ogres Games
  • IQ Reno, NV - Comic Kingdom
  • IQ Houston, TX - R&R Comics
  • IQ Spokane Valley, WA - Trade Winds Gaming Zone
  • Sunday, June 2
  • OPEN Baltimore, MD
  • IQ Kansas City, MO - Spanky's Card Shop
  • IQ Staten Island, NY - Get There Games

STARCITYGAMES.COM EVENTS

  • May 25-26: OPEN Dallas/Fort Worth, TX
  • Jun 1-2: OPEN Baltimore, MD
  • Jun 8-9: OPEN St. Louis, MO
  • Jun 15-16: OPEN Columbus, OH at Origins Game Fair
  • Jun 22-23: OPEN Philadelphia, PA
  • Jun 28-30: GRAND PRIX Miami, FL
  • Jul 6-7: OPEN Worcester, MA
  • Jul 20-21: OPEN Richmond, VA
  • Jul 20: CLASSIC Lansing, MI
  • Jul 26-28: INVITATIONAL Somerset, NJ

ELITE QUALIFIERS

  • Jun 9: Atomic Empire - Durham, NC
  • THIS WEEK: See all Open Trials

EVENT FINDER

  • Complete SCG Schedule - Coverage Archive
NEWS
  • 5/24 August FNM Promo: Dimir Charm
  • 5/24 New Duels 2014 Decks!
  • 5/24 Vote SCG's Gerard Fabiano for KotN!
  • 5/23 Big M14 Rules Update!
  • 5/23 M14 and MTGMM Albums updated!
  • 5/22 YMTC 4 Final Round!
  • 5/21 Weekend Results! May 18-19
  • 5/16 M14 Spoiler: Megantic Sliver
  • 5/15 M14 Spoiler: Vastwood Hydra
  • 5/14 Weekend Results! May 11-12
  • 5/14 YMTC4 Voting Begins!
  • 5/10 The Final Greg Staples Lithograph is...
  • View All News Items - Submit Magic News
DECKLISTS
  • STANDARD
  • LEGACY
  • MODERN
  • 5/19 SCG Classic Springfield, US
  • 5/19 SCG Open Nashville, US
  • 5/19 Invi Qualifier Doylestown, US
  • 5/18 Invi Qualifier FAYETTEVILLE, US
  • 5/18 SCG Super IQ Littleton, US
  • 5/18 Invi Qualifier Roanoke, US
  • 5/18 Invi Qualifier Columbus, US
  • 5/18 Invi Qualifier Concord, US
  • 5/12 SCG Classic Pittsburgh, US
  • 5/12 Pro Tour Qualifier Chicago, US
  • 5/12 Pro Tour Qualifier Madison, US
  • 5/12 SCG Open Charlotte, US
View More Standard Decks - Search Decklists
  • 5/19 SCG Super IQ Milano, US
  • 5/12 Grand Prix Portland, US
  • 4/07 Invi Qualifier Glen Burnie, US
  • 3/17 Grand Prix San Diego, US
  • 3/17 Pro Tour Qualifier Melbourne, AU
  • 3/10 MTGO Daily Event
  • 3/10 Pro Tour Qualifier Magic Online,
  • 3/03 Pro Tour Qualifier Roanoke, US
  • 3/03 Pro Tour Qualifier Philadelphia, US
  • 3/03 Pro Tour Qualifier Toronto, CA
  • 3/03 Pro Tour Qualifier Madison, US
  • 3/03 Pro Tour Qualifier Magic Online,
View More Modern Decks - Search Decklists
  • 5/19 Invi Qualifier Columbus, US
  • 5/19 SCG Open Nashville,
  • 5/19 SCG Open Nashville, US
  • 5/12 Annecy, FR
  • 4/21 SCG Open Seattle, US
  • 4/14 SCG Open Milwaukee, US
  • 4/14 Invi Qualifier Bristol, US
  • 4/07 SCG Invitational Atlanta,
  • 4/07 SCG Invitational Atlanta, US
  • 4/07 SCG Open Atlanta, US
  • 3/24 SCG Open Kansas City, US
  • 3/17 SCG Open Washington, US
View More Legacy Decks - Search Decklists
SOCIAL

StarCityGames.com on Facebook


StarCityGames.com on Twitter

Join the conversation


WEEKLY NEWSLETTER

Exclusive Deals & Content Every Week



 

ACCOUNT
  • Login/Register
  • My Account
  • Order History
  • Credit History
  • Wishlists
  • Premium
  • Digital Items
  • Gift Card Redemption
CONTACT US
  • Customer Service/Order Issues
  • Advertising
  • Articles
  • Game Center
  • Gift Cards
  • Inventory Issues
  • Organized Play
  • SCG Premium
  • Selling to SCG
  • Shipping
  • Submit News
  • Website Bugs/Problems
ORDER QUESTIONS
  • Customer Service Hours
    Monday through Friday
    10AM - 6PM EST
    Ph: (540) 767-GAME (4263)
  • Email
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Refund/Return Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Statement
  • About StarCityGames.com
SCG ORGANIZED PLAY
  • Overview
  • Schedule
  • Coverage Archives
  • Invitational Qualifiers
  • Host an Invitational Qualifier
  • Judge Rewards
  • Open Points
  • Standings
  • SCGLive
GAME CENTER
  • Star City Game Center
    5728 Williamson Road N.W.
    Roanoke, VA 24012
    Ph: (540) 767-GAME(4263)
  • Email
  • Hours & Info
ARCHIVES
  • Search our Articles
  • Coverage Archives
  • RSS Feed
MORE SCG
  • SCGMobile
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Newsletter
  • SCGLive
  • TheManaDrain.com
  • CubeDrafting.com
All original content on this page is © 2012 StarCityGames.com and may not be used or reproduced without consent. Wizards of the Coast, Magic: The Gathering, and their logos are trademarks of Wizards of the Coast LLC. © 2012 Wizards. All rights reserved. StarCityGames.com is not affiliated with Wizards of the Coast LLC.