The Prof explores the accelerating power creep in Commander sets and increasing cost of pre-constructed decks, particularly CMM’s new $80 price. He asks why the price is so high on these though, considering they’re not premium products.
His roundup of the historical prices on commander decks is pretty eye-opening. The original Commander Legends precons were $15-20 each, as was the case for many of the Commander decks after that. Even recently the top end was $34-45 per deck. CMM, however, is one of the most expensive masters sets ever, let alone among all sets.
Similarly, $240 for a Collector Booster box gets us only 4 boosters now, when originally a box had 12.
What happens when the product made for the format made for everyone is priced so high, it’s only available for those with the most cash and most means?
The Prof’s answer is that the community pays this price in many ways:
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WOTC is incentivized to keep prices high in general, and thereby also increase reprint equity. This is obvious given how terrible the mana bases are in the CMM precons ([[Sliver Hive]] being a notable absence), and how many of the CMM reprints could have been in many precons last year.
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Regular Commander decks get worse. [[Fierce Guardianship]] and [[Dockside Extortionist]] a great example of a reprint that could have appeared in any previous deck, but the highest priced reprints only go into high priced sets. Regular decks are underpowered and worse.
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“Everyone’s format” is no longer for everyone. When Commander precons now “aren’t for you,” then the format becomes not for us too. New price floors harm the ability for many to access Commander, which for the Prof is the format of “just jam cards in a deck.”
wotc lately is quite obviously in the mindset of “commander is our most popular format, we need to control and guide it ourselves to ensure we profit from it, because these players are stealing money from us by making up their own format and robbing us of our god-given profits”