M:tG Singles Andy
has sold on eBay
[index] [Fluxx
stuff] [Chrononauts stuff]
[Icehouse stuff] [M:tG
cards] [other stuff]
As described on September
23, 2004, I've been clearing out a bunch of M:tG cards I
stuck in the attic after inventing Fluxx.
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Ancestral
Recall, Beta, Magic: the Gathering single
We got into Magic: The Gathering back in 1993, when it was
brand new. For the first year or so, we were really into it:
we traded like crazy, collecting complete sets of each new expansion,
we ran a few sealed deck tournaments... we even made costumes
based on our favorite cards. But we lost interest in all that
when we decided to start Looney Labs, our own game company.
Over the years we've sold off most of our Magic cards, in
some cases at a significant profit. In 1998, we funded the first
print run of Aquarius using money we made selling some of our
Magic cards. But we kept a bunch of stuff back... we still have
our original Alpha/Beta notebook, which includes a complete set
of Arabian Nights and Antiquities, plus a bunch of different
decks we used to actually play with.
In particular, there's my big best-of-everything deck. As
described in an article I wrote called "Playing Magic Without
a Full Two Decks" (which was published in Pyramid magazine
and can now be found at my website), I developed my own preferred
way of playing the game, in which the 2 players draw cards from
a single, shared deck. Of course, this deck should include lots
of really cool cards, and mine had some of the best: a set of
all 10 dual lands, lots of powerful creatures, and a full set
of the infamous "Power 9."
I haven't played the game in years and considering how valuable
some of these cards have become, I've decided I can live without
them.
This week I'm putting up the Ancestral Recall. This is the
last of my original Power 9 cards. I really love this card...
it's probably my favorite of the Power 9, since I love drawing
more cards (think Fluxx) and look, it also features a pyramid!
(Think Icehouse.) But cool though it is, I'd rather sell it than
play with it.
Obviously it's seen some use, but I think it's still in pretty
good shape. The images here are scans of the actual card you
will receive.
Hi-rez scans are available. Send me email if you're interested
and I'll email them to you.
- This item sold on 7/29/5 for $510.00.
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Time Walk, Beta,
Magic: the Gathering single
We got into Magic: The Gathering back in 1993, when it was
brand new. For the first year or so, we were really into it:
we traded like crazy, collecting complete sets of each new expansion,
we ran a few sealed deck tournaments... we even made costumes
based on our favorite cards. But we lost interest in all that
when we decided to start Looney Labs, our own game company.
Over the years we've sold off most of our Magic cards, in
some cases at a significant profit. In 1998, we funded the first
print run of Aquarius using money we made selling some of our
Magic cards. But we kept a bunch of stuff back... we still have
our original Alpha/Beta notebook, which includes a complete set
of Arabian Nights and Antiquities, plus a bunch of different
decks we used to actually play with.
In particular, there's my big best-of-everything deck. As
described in an article I wrote called "Playing Magic Without
a Full Two Decks" (which was published in Pyramid magazine
and can now be found at my website), I developed my own preferred
way of playing the game, in which the 2 players draw cards from
a single, shared deck. Of course, this deck should include lots
of really cool cards, and mine had some of the best: a set of
all 10 dual lands, lots of powerful creatures, and a full set
of the infamous "Power 9."
I haven't played the game in years and considering how valuable
some of these cards have become, I've decided I can live without
them.
This week I'm putting up the Time Walk, the last of my Power
9. I really love this card... but I'd rather sell it than play
with it.
Obviously it's seen some use, but I think it's still in pretty
good shape. The images here are scans of the actual card you
will receive.
Hi-rez scans are available. Send me email if you're interested
and I'll email them to you.
- This item sold on 6/8/5 for $576.77.
|
TimeTwister, Alpha,
Magic: the Gathering single
We got into Magic: The Gathering back in 1993, when it was
brand new. For the first year or so, we were really into it:
we traded like crazy, collecting complete sets of each new expansion,
we ran a few sealed deck tournaments... we even made costumes
based on our favorite cards. But we lost interest in all that
when we decided to start Looney Labs, our own game company.
Over the years we've sold off most of our Magic cards, in
some cases at a significant profit. In 1998, we funded the first
print run of Aquarius using money we made selling some of our
Magic cards. But we kept a bunch of stuff back... we still have
our original Alpha/Beta notebook, which includes a complete set
of Arabian Nights and Antiquities, plus a bunch of different
decks we used to actually play with.
In particular, there's my big best-of-everything deck. As
described in an article I wrote called "Playing Magic Without
a Full Two Decks" (which was published in Pyramid magazine
and can now be found at my website), I developed my own preferred
way of playing the game, in which the 2 players draw cards from
a single, shared deck. Of course, this deck should include lots
of really cool cards, and mine had some of the best: a set of
all 10 dual lands, lots of powerful creatures, and a full set
of the infamous "Power 9."
I haven't played the game in years and considering how valuable
some of these cards have become, I've decided I can live without
them.
This week I'm putting up the TimeTwister. I really love this
card... its function is a lot like the card "What Were We
Just Doing?" from my own game Stoner Fluxx. Plus it's about
Time Travel, a subject very dear to my heart. But I'd rather
sell it than play with it.
Obviously it's seen some use, but I think it's still in pretty
good shape. The images here are scans of the actual card you
will receive.
- This item sold on 4/21/5 for $375.00
|
Mox Pearl, Beta,
Magic: the Gathering single
This is the last of the Moxes that once powered Kristin's
famous all-artifact Magic deck.
Way back when, in the earliest of M:TG days, when no one had
anything other than original Alpha and Beta cards, people often
felt gypped when they opened up a new booster pack and discovered
that their Rare card was just a dumb old Mox. In those earliest
of days, Moxes were seen as kind of pointless... what you wanted
for your Rare was a big powerful monster, not something that
was basically just a piece of land. So, in those days, it was
possible to make trades for Moxes that would be outlandish today...
and Kristin cornered the market. She got together enough Moxes
to power a zero-land, nothing-but-Artifacts deck. (She had a
Black Lotus or two in there as well, but they were much harder
to get -- everyone knew the value of those right away.)
Kristin's All-Artifact Deck quickly developed a reputation
in our community as a true "killer" deck... everyone
wanted to play against it, and *everyone* lost when they did.
It was ridiculously powerful, and Kristin had a great time playing
with it. Then Arabian Nights came out, and she got several cool
new cards to spice up her All-Artifact deck (including pyramids,
which were especially fun for us).
And then Antiquities came out, and suddenly there were all
these new cards that specifically beat up on Artifacts, and suddenly
her unbeatable deck was very easy to beat. Everyone who had previously
been demolished by Kristin's All-Artifact Deck wanted a re-match,
and even though now she usually lost, she had great fun getting
crushed again and again.
And then WotC brought out yet more expansions, and yet more,
and eventually we lost interest in Magic and decided to start
our own game company, and we just stuck all our old Magic cards
on the shelf.
We sold off most of her Moxes long ago, but I kept a set of
all 5 in my big all-purpose Best-of-Everything deck. (There's
an essay at my website about how I prefer to play with both players
using a single, shared deck.) But I never play the game anymore,
and haven't in years, and the deck will still be plenty cool
without the Moxes (and the Lotus) so I'm selling them off, one
by one.
This Mox Pearl is from the Beta printing. Obviously it's seen
some use, but I think it's still in pretty good shape. The image
here is a scan of the actual card; please send me email if you're
interested and I'll email you back with a high-rez version of
this scan.
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BLACK LOTUS, Beta,
Magic: the Gathering M:TG TCG
This is a beta Black Lotus which I traded for in 1993 and
which I had in my
original primary Magic deck back in the days when I was still
playing the game.
Obviously it's seen some use, but I think it's still in pretty
good shape. The image here is a scan of the actual card you will
receive.
I'm starting the bidding on my Black Lotus at $700, as this
is the amount I was offered for it by a professional Magic card
vendor at
Gen-Con last month.
After putting this up for auction, I got a request for high
rez scans of the front and back. Unfortunately my scanner broke
last week and I hadn't ever scanned the back, so I had to resort
to using my camera instead. Anyway, here are 3 detailed images
you can download (Warning, they're big!):
- My Black Lotus sold on 9/29/4 for $970.00!
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stuff] [Chrononauts stuff]
[Icehouse stuff] [M:tG
cards] [other stuff] |
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