Card prices.
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Because if one is more expensive more people would take that one and sell it instead.
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any two cards that have the same availability will be roughly the same value. it's not about who people want or don't want, it's about how available the card is
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@ryancostello620_NSW thats all stub transfers by those 3rd party stub companies.
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@AppleLemon560_MLBTS I just assumed the availability of the card correlates with players selecting said card. While not unfathomable, I have a hard time believing players select the cards at a near 50% rate. Especially with this example. Francisco lindor being a switch hitter you would think him being the meta would mean more people selecting them.
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Up till this point, most are selling it off instead of keeping it. At 160k, you’re banking on it dropping to 60-80k towards the end, so sell it now and make a nice profit.
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@SavageSteve74_PSN I remember when bosses were so much cheaper at the end of a season.
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It’s because very few people are even completing the innings programs at this point and bigger picture a lot of players have either quit playing completely or backed off considerably as the rewards are not worth the time sink.
The game is dying fast and without some massive changes will be dead in the water by July.
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@SavageSteve74_PSN I remember when bosses were so much cheaper at the end of a season.
Back when XP was plentiful. Back when a Program would grant like 25k, this year you're lucky for 10k.
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if anything, more people selecting one card over the other may actually make that card cheaper, because it puts more in circulation. Look at the last inning - I'm gonna bet way more people took Randy than Babe, so Babe has become less plentiful and now more expensive
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@SavageSteve74_PSN I remember when bosses were so much cheaper at the end of a season.
They cut the market supply by half by going from 2 sellable bosses to 1