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Pro Tour Eldritch Moon and Modern Prices

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Hey guys! You might have noticed that I’m new here. As outlined here, I've been brought onto Modern Nexus to write a weekly column, and I want to take a little of your time to introduce myself. My name is Jim and although I’m originally from New York City, I live in Orlando, Florida. I play a lot of Magic but when I’m not slinging spells I'm working as a software developer. If you’d like to chat more the best way to contact me is @Phrost_ on Twitter! While most people on this site write about Modern strategy, my focus is going to be on the financial side from the player’s point of view. My aim is to provide Modern enthusiasts and players the information they need to know to play their favorite format at the cheapest cost possible.

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Pro Tour Eldritch Moon

So yeah there was just a Pro Tour. I’m sure all of the Modern players are excited, right? Eh, maybe not. But let’s be clear here. Standard is a huge reason that cards are worth money (or not) so it is important to look at Standard trends to see how they affect your Modern prices. Emrakul the Promised EndLike we’ve seen before (with Nahiri, the Harbinger for instance), Modern can also have a pretty big impact on the price of Standard-legal cards. Let’s break down what happened at the Pro Tour.

There were theoretically five different deck types that made the Top 8 of Pro Tour Eldritch Moon but I really count four of them as “Emrakul” decks. Temur Emerge and R/G Ramp are basically trying to do the same thing, which is play big things capped off by Emrakul, the Promised End herself. As you might have expected, Emrakul has seen big gains this past weekend. Most of Emrakul’s in-game value comes from her cast trigger which is great if you’re not sneaking it into play.

In Modern, it’s likely to become adopted by R/G Tron lists as a way to beat combo decks (like Ad Nauseum) that aren’t that negatively affected by the Ulamog, the Ceaseless Hunger cast trigger. If you don’t play Tron, however, I think this is a great time to get out of any copies of Emrakul you may have. Her price will flatten out in the coming months as the hype train comes to a close.

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Bant Company came in second in the Top 8 with a pair of copies, neither making the finals. That’s a sharp decrease in dominance from the previous week’s SCG Open in Baltimore where 17 of the Top 32 finishers were playing Bant Company. collected companyNow that the sky is no longer falling I feel like we will finally see the price on Collected Company start to dip. If you’re interested in getting them for Modern, I think the best time will be the week of Kaladesh spoilers but you may also be able to find Standard players looking to move out now at a good rate for you.

On the other hand, if you already own Collected Company I think we’re just past the point where it’s not worth selling them to rebuy them later. The best buylist prices have slipped to just 66% of the best sell prices. At this point Collected Company would have to go under $9 for you to break even. That’s fairly unlikely at this point.

The last two decks in the Top 8 are functionally very different but share the same high-priced planeswalker, Liliana, the Last Hope. She is definitely no Liliana of the Veil and my expectations for her in Modern are slim to none. If you don’t play Standard, now will probably be the best time you can cash out your Lilianas. Buylists across the board are pretty high so you can easily turn your Lilianas into some great cash or store credit---but the real pro play is to trade them into Modern staples.

Atarkas CommandWhile Liliana might be “worth” $40 right now you’ll probably be hard-pressed to find someone with a Tarmogoyf that wants to trade it for three Lilianas. What you won’t have trouble finding is someone looking to trade their soon-rotating staples. Try to trade your Lilianas for Kolaghan's Command, Collected Company, Atarka's Command, or Anafenza, Kin-Tree Spirit.

You might be lucky and find an overjoyed Standard player happily unloading their old cards for new ones. It's likely cards on both sides of that trade will fall in the coming weeks but you will end up with the cards that are proven players in Modern and will likely retain more of their current value.

Final Thoughts

  • I think the most impactful card in Modern from Eldritch Moon is going to be Eldritch Evolution. It has decreased in price since its pre-order hype pricing and I think now is the time to get in. Jeff Hoogland’s Kiki Chord list that made Top 8 in the last SCG Modern Classic plays four copies. Jeff is definitely a brewing barometer I use to predict price increases in Modern. The SCG Open in Syracuse next weekend is Modern and the triple GP weekend in three weeks is also Modern so there is a limited amount of time you will have to get these before we see another Nahiri spike. Coincidentally, Jeff was also the first one to be playing Nahiri, the Harbinger before she saw widespread adoption.
  • Stupid price spikes like Mishra's Bauble are going to keep happening and, sadly, it’s mostly unavoidable. It will take a whole article to explain the cause of this problem.
  • I plan to write some articles about getting into Modern from the base of a Standard collection. If this is relevant to you, let me know!

I always encourage comments in the section below or on Twitter. I’m new here and I want to know what you like to read!

7 thoughts on “Pro Tour Eldritch Moon and Modern Prices

  1. Always cool to look at the pricing interaction between modern and standard, I think most modern players don’t really consider it and end up getting financially burned in the long run. I think the site hasn’t had too many articles looking at finance in modern in depth and I think the site could use more. Analyzing prices of huge format pillars like Affinity, Jund, tron, and twin (RIP) over time would be interesting.

    Welcome to the Nexus!

    1. Thanks! My plan is to examine price trends and to help predict when the best time for people to buy or sell their Modern cards is. As always, if you have specific questions you can always leave them in the comments or ping me on twitter.

  2. Should have probably touched on grim flayer – jordan was trying to brew with it for modern and I think it saw a surge recently.

    More generally if eldritch evolution sees no standard play and only modern play in kiki chord decks it should not spike and should stil decline, no? Nahiri spike was due to std play and being played in jeskai and kiki chord and rwx brews. Evolution doesnt seem to have that kind of pedigree

    1. I’ve been curious about Eldritch Evolution as well. It really reads like a card that *should* make a splash in Modern, since there’s such a deep pool of available creatures. I put it in a short-ramp deck in which I use it to grab a 5-drop on T3 (alongside other means of getting the same result), and had reasonable success. But I haven’t heard much about it since spoiler season, and it’s surprisingly affordable at the moment. Did it seriously fall flat? Or has it just not found a high-profile home yet?

      1. There haven’t been quite enough large Modern tournaments to really showcase the power of the card. I would expect this weekend for the price of the card to rise if it shows up often and wins on camera during the SCG Open.

    2. Grim Flayer is a card that probably won’t see much high tier modern play because it misses on all of the most important parts of great Modern cards. It needs to be resilient, efficient, disruptive, fast, or over powering. Most of the time it will be worse than Tarmogoyf and Tarmogoyf can be played in more decks.

      Nahiri spiked on the back to back weekends of a SCG Open followed by huge Modern Gps in Charlotte and Los Angeles. She was never very good in Standard.

  3. I really don’t want to come off as rude in any way, but I really don’t understand this article. The premise seems really muddled. “I am going to go over the top 8 of the most recent standard pro tour and then talk about modern for some reason.”

    The connection seems loose. Almost all of the analysis could have been either outside the context of the pro tour, or modern, or in some cases both. Some of it was basically just “this card is good in standard but not good in modern.” which seems like something that is true about most cards that see standard play.

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