Smooth.So Travis Woo got his dumb ass suspended from CFB for going off on a jewish conspiracy rant on his Twitch stream. Could possibly lead to a ban. I listened to an archive, and it's a magical, pot-induced rant worth of Lumie.
Congrats man, how much power will you have then? Do I remember 5 you said earlier?He should have listened to the note he wrote on his hand.
In other news, I'm within spitting distance of squeezing a Lotus out of GP Atlanta if I can just cobble together one or two more things.
Four, Lotus will be 5. I'm only going for it because the lion's share will be credit from working events, and the rest is credit I'm buying at a discount. I'll have well under half the value in actual sunk cash. It would be exceedingly difficult to lose money on it.Congrats man, how much power will you have then? Do I remember 5 you said earlier?
I have a few 'things' on my list of disposable income purchases or whenever I stop wasting money on silly computer hardware and tech and power cards is on there well.
$100k? Jesus... And to think I let a (lightly) used Beta Lotus go for a box of The Dark as a young adult... was too worried about impressing the girl I was interested in by making a favorable deal for her friends and didn't even think about the long term value...MTG MAGIC THE GATHERING BETA BLACK LOTUS BGS 10 THE HIGHEST GRADED!
Is this the card you are buying?
Speaking of grading - always wondered - the rare "crimp" errors that occurred, how did those effect pricing? Forget which card it was (I think it was something decent though, I don't think it was power though - but was ages ago) did have a crimp error where the bottom edge for a good 0.25-0.5 in was clearly caught in the crimper for the packs...I highly doubt that will sell for 100k. A 9.5 Alpha Lotus, the highest graded Alpha, went for about 50k recently. Alpha is significantly more rare than Beta.
So I'm guessing price is pretty flat then? Due to tiny market but rather rare?Well for grading crimped is really bad. However there are a number of people that specifically collect them since they're reasonably rare and an interesting novelty.
I think it varies a lot depending on specific cards involved and era. Crimping was probably more common at one point due to poorer quality control. Highly playable cards probably also receive a higher mark up as well.So I'm guessing price is pretty flat then? Due to tiny market but rather rare?