Magic: The Gathering Modern Horizons Booster Box | 36 Booster Packs | Factory Sealed, One Size
Score By Feature
OveReview Final Score
Product Description
Questions & Answers
Due to the shape of the boxes, it would be difficult to ship a floppy taco in these
With every pack, you'll find a collectible art card. There are 54 versions, and they are all numbered, so you always know which ones you are getting.
There is no standard set because it is not standardized. Modern is the only set in this set that skips standard.
In the promo, there is a Flusterstorm song. In any case, the extra $40 is not worth it
Selected User Reviews For Magic: The Gathering Modern Horizons Booster Box | 36 Booster Packs | Factory Sealed, One Size
There's a good chance the booster box I purchased was searched and re-sealed. I can't even begin to talk about the mythics in these packs, nor their foil. Having searched the shop that sent the box and their reviews, I found that many other people have experienced the same problem as me. The odds of pulling higher quality cards from a random pack, compared to the entirety of the booster box, are way greater when I buy 4 packs at my local game store. You're probably better off buying the box from a local store rather than from Amazon. I would suggest not buying the box from Amazon.
This was my second order for these boxes, the first one having been shipped The box of cards contained a Wrenn and a Six, and it ended up being worth 240 dollars based on the TCGplayer mid value. Every card was arranged in the unique modern horizons order, and there was nothing amiss. In an effort to increase my collection, I bought another booster box, estimating there to be more or less 200 cards in each. When I opened my first booster pack from the box, I quickly noticed that something was wrong. Cards were packaged upside down, and they were arranged just like a booster pack, with the rare/mythic and art cards in the back, rather than the modern horizons scheme with the rare/mythic and art cards in Having written off all that as just an error of the distributor, I continued to open the remainder of the package. As a result, I was disappointed to learn that the expensive cards were worth just under 100 bucks-less than half of what I had paid for the box. Furthermore, the box was filled with five mythics, of which none were of any value. If they were added deliberately to give it a veneer of value, they would have done so successfully. Something is not right here, and while I do not wish to accuse the distributor of the second box of altering the packs, either that was the case, or I just got exceptionally unlucky, both with the quality of the box and the value of the cards within.
A random card from an earlier set was replaced with every Mythic, Foil, and Rare in the set.
The set has great mythic and rare slots, but not so much on the uncommon slot (we'll have to wait and see if there's a breakaway hit there). The expected value of the set is higher than the $200 MSRP, but will fall slightly over time as the artwork gets better. The set is much more a tribute to the Time Spiral block than it is to Modern Format, which is a good thing. There are two versions of this product a lower quality version that has the cards in the traditional order (common, uncommon, rare), and a higher quality version that has the cards reversed. There are some Amazon distributors of the lower quality version, which I am able to verify. There is a lower quality because of the cheap card stock and the poor quality ink (higher volatile components where there is a lower percentage of solids They should be able to offer the higher quality boxes to the rest of their distributors as well.
There is no way I could give this a zero rating. Having been tampered with, all the rares and uncommons were missing, as well as the lands. Other modern horizons boxes that I have ordered from Amazon have been satisfactory in the past.
Wizards needs to do a better job of quality control, since I have no complaints about the cards I got. The packs all had the exact same cuts and tears at the top and bottom, which made me think there had been tampering, but the spots were in the exact same places and the angles were the same, so I suspected a manufacturing defect. They also had a rough streak across their surface, like something had dragged them over it. On top of the stack are the token cards, and unfortunately, most of them have some noticeable damage to the right corner of the bottom. There were either chips on the edges or a thin layer of peeling paint on the surface. In light of the fact that there were also foil tokens in this set, this was most disappointing. There was a significant bend to the foils which was not present on the rest of the cards in the packs. The rest were bent as well but not to the same extent. Although Modern Horizons isn't the lowest priced set out there, given the potential value of the cards as well as the ridiculous amount of damage to the packaging, I expected a lot more.
On closer inspection, the packages appeared to have been resealed, so it's apparent that bad luck happens, but not in the degree to which this happened. For suppliers, I am not sure if it is a private party that is handled by Amazon, if it is simply pallets that Amazon has lying around, or if I have more garbage fire luck in three The force of negation is one, and there are nine mythics among the three A foil rare and a foil unique.
As I mentioned, this is my second box purchased my first one was factory sealed and in perfect condition. This second one went through successfully for the seller. It was a repackaged item. Some packages date back as far as 1994, so all the packs were opened up and replaced with new cards. It was a very disappointing experience.