forceoreo.blogg.se

Time spiral release
Time spiral release













time spiral release

Some people saying the supply is record-setting with how little they are receiving, while others noting nothing out of the ordinary about supply. I have heard conflicting information on the supply of Time Spiral Remastered. This could easily be the most valuable set for singles we have seen in a long while, or it could all crash and burn, to wait and see is the path to that answer. My hypothesis is that the single values right now are not too far off from the actual value, and I do not see the sealed prices being too bad either. This could suggest that as stores are opening boxes, the discovery is being made that these cards are valued at an appropriate price relative to rarity. The prices also usually start to shift significantly lower as stores start to open boxes and the real-world rarity of the cards in the set is discovered and prices are adjusted, but the prices don't seem to be shifting downwards too drastically. What is a new revelation is that preorder prices may be closer to the actual value than preorders may historically suggest. The preorder prices for singles tend to be higher than the actual value, this is something that is not a new idea. There is a likelihood that singles will drop and bring the price of sealed down with it, but that is something we will have to take a look at. With more time bringing further clarity, the prices of the sealed product have risen, likely solidifying the prices of singles to a certain degree. The price of the box would fall, and so would the singles, the price of the box would rise, and the singles would hold, or the boxes would stay the same, and the singles would go as the market willed them to. The main question regarding value consisted of a couple of possible outcomes. Boxes ranged from $150 (rarely) to $190 in the first day or two, they quickly jumped to $200 to $210 a box, and are currently sitting at $235 on TCGplayer, almost $250 on Amazon, $225 at Card Kingdom (limit of 5 per customer) and Star City Games at $225 (26 boxes left at the time of writing). Over the course of the past week or two, prices that were considered by some to already be too expensive at the early prices, have risen drastically. With the normal value of the set being already a home run and the timeshifted foils, generally, at a rate of 1-2 per box being the hit or miss added value that they are, it's safe to assume that prices have to adjust. Foil prices are even more insane, with prices ranging from $6 to over $300. The singles value at preorder is insane, with 11 non-foil cards worth more than $20 dollars, 6 of those being timeshifted, and 24 cards above $10, and 14 of those being timeshifted. I spun the wheel a couple of hundred times, and it just seems too good to be true. Someone made a Booster Box opening simulator, using officially stated pull rates, and the average EV was off the charts. Even with accounting for inflated prices ahead of release, the value is incredible. With the release of Time Spiral Remastered almost upon us, possibly already out by the time you may read this, the looming question has yet to be definitively answered: will TSR hold its value, go up, or go down? If you read my original article on TSR, you may see that the expected value is incredibly high.















Time spiral release