I was talking to a guy at work about being a 93/94 player and the 'Swedish rules'. I told him I own the majority of the cards that I want, and there's only a small # of cards that I can justify buying that I want and don't already own; which cost approximately 500$ for the lot. Then there are the cards that I don't own that I want but won't buy (Bazaars/UNL Volcanic and U. Seas). Now of course, to a non-MtGer 500$ might not seem justifiable. I don't think I mentioned that not including the Bazaars, I own the Revised versions of the cards.
Anyway, I know this is a pretty relative question. I'm curious what baseline # people consider to be genuinely expensive when buying a card.
25$ a card? 100$? 200$? I know my opinion has certainly changed as I got into the higher end buys. What is your opinion?
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Expensive is >$500 for a single card.
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$50, but it depends on the price of a deck as a whole, since one card is not a complete deck. Those $50 bills add up quickly. I don't like $2K-$3K decks as a baseline. As a player, I would prefer to have a cheaper game and to own more of the game pieces. Owning all of Legacy, which is only one of the game's many formats, has never really been possible for me, even starting in 2009 when things were significantly cheaper. I pretty much stick to Legacy, Cube, and some Old-School.
I feel like it depends on the card. I'll balk at $90 Ports, but be okay with $500 BB Duals. I think it has more to do with price memory for me.
Anything I have to talk to my wife about before I pull the trigger. I guess in that regard over 50. The benifit for me though is I own everything I need. White around the edges sure, but I am not going to spend another few thousand for BB shit. I am content to sit on what I have. (Lands deck aside of course. I will be BB Duals for it.)
I think Richard Garfield said 20$ chase rares was what would be best for a format and I sort of agree with that. Decks cost less, making it easier for people to try different decks which helps against local meta stagnation. For pimp/ collectables however, I dont have a problem with any value, in fact I think it would be cool if they printed super rare playable promos like actual playable mox promos for vintage champs winners/top 8 would be really cool.
Foil russian, test prints.
The most i spent in a single piece of cardboard is 5k, I would consider 1k to be quite a lot for a single card.
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I think it's ability to hold value factors heavily into the determination of whether it is expensive. Also, how much you are paying under the market value also factors in. Anything over $20 for a standard card is expensive imo. But in legacy it's different.
Numerically for legacy you average player probably would consider > $500 to be expensive.
OR
Anything over the cost of the most expensive dual land at any given time (revised)
To a majority of ppl on this form, since there are many people who pimp their decks a few thousand may not really be expensive. Of course expensive is also relative to your income.
I think the most i've spent on a single card was 1200 for my beta black lotus (graded 8.5) 6 years ago. I didn't even think it was expensive at the time cause it was a great deal.
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why cards are so expensive...hoarders
Any amount that requires financial planning based on current circumstances. There are some months where 40 dollars is my max on any given card. Some when it is 10. Some its 100. All depending on how my frivolous money account is.
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If thats a question in regards to a clientel, you need to define that one. If you ask if 400$ per card is much for a single guy/gal in their mid 20s, the answer is different from the one of a 12yo kid in school, a university Student or a Family father/mother. If you want to go down asking if the prices of todays cards are toxic for new players, you need to look at the age & financial structure of those, for example.
Perception of prices change also over time and the personal situation. Im 2006 i bought FBB U.Seas for 80€ and considered that a lot of money. Later I bought Beta Power Pieces monthly. Today, I look at the prices as unjustified and artificial and wonder why everyone thinks their print-fresh promo FoWs are worth more than FBB Duals which are 20 years old
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It's all relative. Thousands may not be expensive for alpha power. It may be a good price. I consider foil Leovold to be expensive because yes he is rare but he will be reprinted and his value will sink like a stone. That card is expensive.
mtgpimp
If a single card approaches or exceeds $100, I consider it to be expensive.
Anything over $200 gets into 'out of my range' territory unless I'm able to trade value towards the purchase.
Expensive is relative for everyone.
I have loads of foil signed staples. Majority of my grixis delver, miracles, dredge, etc are signed and foil.
I will NEVER get my foil FS goyfs, FBB duals, ONS fetches signed. Those cards are expensive and lose too much fluidity if they're signed IMO. So probably >$200 for me.
Over $100, though as others have pointed out it depends on the card. I whined about buying Walking Ballistas for $10-15 each, but didn't mind getting a Bayou for $150 a few weeks later.
In general, though, I try not to spend over $100 on singles in a given month, so a $100+ card is a bigger purchase for me.
Agreed with this.
Though really, there isn't necessarily a price that I'd consider "expensive" at the point of buying, but that word is dictated on the context of the purchase as well as the justification behind it. I make a very good living and can buy cards at will. I actively play multiple formats, but think $100 for Heart of Kiran playset for Standard because that feels expensive, yet a $1000 set of Underground Seas won't bat an eye. Expensive for Standard means sinking money into cards that you won't get a good ROI on as it rotates, while expensive for Legacy means you get set back further by upfront cost but can resell it if needed (but in most cases don't because you're buying it for a reason but I digress). So if you have a $250 Underground Sea, that isn't necessarily viewed as expensive because you can flip it for what you got it for so you're only temporarily set back. Adversely, those Heart of Kiran you played with through Standard season aren't selling for shit when they rotate so it's money down the drain.
Tl;dr: Expensive is a only relative to the context of how badly you want something, how useful it is to you, and whether or not you have a chance at a reasonable ROI.
If it costs more than $30 and is not on the reserved list, it's expensive.
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