Friday, August 25, 2023

Recent Arena Decks

Library of Leng card art
It's been a while since I posted decks. Today, the focus is what I've been playing in Arena.

White Net Deck
This aggro deck is straightforward: slow opponents with Thalia, use removal like Brutal Cathar, annoy people with Anointed Peacekeeper, and get some low-cost spells back from the grave with Serra Paragon.
4 Thalia, Guardian of Thraben (DKA) 24
3 Adeline, Resplendent Cathar (MID) 1
4 Brutal Cathar (MID) 7
4 Intrepid Adversary (MID) 25
4 Hopeful Initiate (VOW) 20
4 Hotshot Mechanic (NEO) 16
1 Eiganjo, Seat of the Empire (NEO) 268
4 Anointed Peacekeeper (DMU) 2
2 Guardian of New Benalia (DMU) 19
4 Serra Paragon (DMU) 32
1 Destroy Evil (DMU) 17
2 Cathar Commando (MID) 10
23 Plains (DMU) 277

Bluey
I really like this deck; I made a Modern variation in cardboard. The goal is to plow through cards (by casting cheap spells) until you can drop Tolarian Terror and/or Haughty Djinn. My cardboard version saved some money by dropping Ledger Shredder and adding more copies of the Djinn.
4 Consider (MID) 44
2 Essence Scatter (IKO) 49
4 Delver of Secrets (MID) 47
4 Fading Hope (MID) 51
3 Shore Up (DMU) 64
3 Ledger Shredder (SNC) 46
3 Negate (ZNR) 71
4 Tolarian Terror (DMU) 72
20 Island (ANA) 10
1 Essence Scatter (DMU) 49
4 Impulse (DMU) 55
4 Thirst for Discovery (VOW) 85
3 Slip Out the Back (SNC) 62
1 Haughty Djinn (DMU) 52

Nazgul2
I blogged about this one already; it is the only Lord of the Rings: Tales of Middle Earth I can get to be competitive, and it needs Sheoldred to do it.
1 The One Ring (LTR) 246
2 Witch-king of Angmar (LTR) 114
4 Orcish Bowmasters (LTR) 103
3 Invoke Despair (NEO) 101
1 Barad-dûr (LTR) 253
4 Call of the Ring (LTR) 79
3 Gollum, Patient Plotter (LTR) 84
1 Cut Down (DMU) 89
3 Sheoldred, the Apocalypse (DMU) 107
2 Infernal Grasp (MID) 107
4 Go for the Throat (BRO) 102
1 Nazgûl (LTR) 100
1 Nazgûl (LTR) 339
1 Nazgûl (LTR) 338
1 Nazgûl (LTR) 337
1 Nazgûl (LTR) 336
1 Nazgûl (LTR) 335
1 Nazgûl (LTR) 334
1 Nazgûl (LTR) 333
1 Nazgûl (LTR) 332
23 Swamp (LTR) 267

Burn Net Deck
Possibly my favorite burn deck ever. I also made a cardboard Modern version of this. It moves fast and hits hard, with multiple ways to get an opponent. I especially enjoy Mechanized Warfare with a few End the Festivities.
4 Lightning Strike (XLN) 149
4 Monastery Swiftspear (BRO) 144
4 Play with Fire (MID) 154
1 Chandra, Dressed to Kill (VOW) 149
4 End the Festivities (VOW) 155
4 Reckless Impulse (VOW) 174
4 Voldaren Epicure (VOW) 182
4 Kumano Faces Kakkazan (NEO) 152
4 Phoenix Chick (DMU) 140
1 Squee, Dubious Monarch (DMU) 146
2 Feldon, Ronom Excavator (BRO) 135
4 Mechanized Warfare (BRO) 139
20 Mountain (MIR) 346

Greenie Meanie ND
I also really like this mono-green tempo deck. It can endure the quick hits or counterspells and chug out efficient creatures/mana ramp until the heavy hitters come out. Things really get exciting when Defiler of Vigor's ability gets going; it combines well with Augur of Autumn.
2 Workshop Warchief (SNC) 165
4 Augur of Autumn (MID) 168
4 Ascendant Packleader (VOW) 186
3 Cemetery Prowler (VOW) 191
1 Bouncer's Beatdown (SNC) 135
1 Gala Greeters (SNC) 148
4 Jewel Thief (SNC) 151
2 Topiary Stomper (SNC) 160
1 Defiler of Vigor (DMU) 160
2 Llanowar Loamspeaker (DMU) 170
2 Silverback Elder (DMU) 177
2 Tail Swipe (DMU) 182
2 Titan of Industry (SNC) 159
2 Ulvenwald Oddity (VOW) 225
3 Elfhame Wurm (DMU) 161
20 Forest (ELD) 269
4 Crystal Grotto (DMU) 246
1 Boseiju, Who Endures (NEO) 266

Those paying attention will note that a lot of what I have been playing in standard is dated; I have not incorporated the last three releases (Phyrexia: All Will Be One, March of the Machine, or Aftermath) into any of these. And they still hold up reasonably well. 

Saturday, August 19, 2023

Selling a Collection

Archivist card art
Interestingly, last year I was blogging about inventorying my collection. This month, I sold 25% of my cards. This post looks at selling your collection and de-inventorying it.

My Magic collection ebbs and flows. I buy cards or get them from friends, and sometimes, things get out of hand. Since I've been inventorying my collection, I looked recently and was astounded at how many cards I had accumulated: about 42,000. That's way too many. When you have that much, most of your collection goes unused. In addition, I had a number of valuable cards that never saw play; it makes sense to sell them. I wanted to minimize. Here's how I did it.

Deciding what to sell
It all starts with 1) what you use and 2) what you like. What I used was fairly obvious: I have a number of decks or cubes ready to go, and I know which ones I favor. What I like was trickier. I guess it is better to ask "what do I like the most?" or "what do I actually like vs. think I like?" That took some thinking.

Though I love exploring Magic, there are some formats I just don't play. Pauper, for example. I like pauper in theory but never actually play. Or Commander draft. Basically, I like:
- Limited constructed (building decks in the Standard pool or from blocks of sets, when those were a thing)
- Cube drafts
- Commander constructed
- Casual constructed (building fun decks, probably not competitive, but amusing)
- Exploring (encountering lots of cards)

I already had decks for those first four categories. For the last, I realized that I can do this through singleton formats (where you can have only one copy of a card). That is satisfied in Commander and Cube drafts. 

I typically collect 4 copies of a given card, but when I realized my 'exploration' focus, I decided to go through a lot of my cards and go down to 1 copy (or 2, if I really liked it). That was the bulk of what I sold.

The other thing to consider are high-value cards. I sorted my inventory by market value and realized I had some valuable cards that I never used. That is where the money is when it comes to selling (see next section), so I chose 276 of those to sell.

Expected price
Selling Magic cards can be done individually or in bulk. 

If individually, you will get the best price, but prepare to spend your life putting cards up for auction, mailing them, etc. That was out for me. I would sell in bulk.

If selling in bulk, many Local Game Stores (LGS) operate as follows:
- use TCGPlayer low prices (my inventory app shows low, mid, and market prices)
- list cards worth $3 and up based on TCGPlayer low price
- the store will offer 60-70% of TCGMarket low based on your cards' conditions
- the rest is considered bulk, and stores will offer $2.50-$3.00 per thousand cards for that

To give you an idea of what that means, consider the cards I sold.
- Total sold: 10,000 (almost exactly)
- Total market value: $4,600
- High-value cards: 276
- High-value cards market value: $3265
- High-value cards TCGPlayer low value: $2480

The store gave me $1500 for the lot, based on the fact that some of my high-value cards were in poor condition. I accepted. It was fair.

The big thing to know when selling is that your bulk cards are worth almost nothing. Even those worth $1-$2 each. Stores will not bother including those in offers, and unless you want to spend dozens of hours selling them yourself, I wouldn't fret about it.

De-inventorying
What a pain. I'm not going to lie . . . this took a long time. You have to navigate your app to the card in question, adjust its quantity (or delete it entirely), and do that for (in my case) 10,000 cards. I found, based on the app I use, that the ease of doing this really depends on how you inventoried your stuff in the first place. In cases where I created folders by set, it was pretty simple. Go to that set, sort by set number, and if you stuff is also stored by set number, you can go down the list pretty fast. Where it got hard were those places where a given card had been inventoried in another folder (because it was in a deck or in my binder when I did my inventory). That wasn't so fun. In all, I probably got through most (8,000?) pretty quickly, but then spent hours on what remained based on folder placement. It wasn't fun. And makes you think, to be blunt, if inventorying cards is worth it in the first place. In my case, I think it was, as it enabled me to identify and sell the top cards. But when you add up the hours I spent last year (inventorying) and this year (removing) . . . oi.