MTG Pulled from a booster and put straight into sleeve and card saver.
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Cards are unplayed and were put into sleeves immediately upon being pulled. Will ship with tracking via USPS First-Class.

Will be packed and delivered to the Post Office within 2 business day after ordering. Anything that happens in transit beyond that is out of my control thank you for your understanding

Combine shipping is additional .10 per card. If ebay is not showing the correct figure for S&H on your invoice, checkout & ask for a combined shipping rate & we will send a corrected invoice.

 

GRADING

So, how do you assign a grade to a card?

 

First off, the scale here is as follows

NM/MT

Light Play

Moderate Play

Heavy Play

Damaged

 

Let's start with the easy stuff...


NM/MT - stands for Near Mint to Mint.  Basically a pack fresh card.  A NM/MT card will not have any shuffle wear, play wear, or any major flaws.  It may have a couple very minor flaws such as a tiny edge chip or tiny scuff from leafing thru the pack or stack of cards.  

 

Heavy Play -  This card has seen better days.  It would be considered marked if played without sleeves due to the play wear.  Typically, major surface wear, chipping, white showing on edges, etc.  But the card will still be able to be played in a sleeve without worry about it being marked.  The card can have so much wear that it appears 'snow-covered' but will still be considered tournament legal if played in the proper sleeve. 

 

Damaged - This card has a major flaw that not only makes the card 'marked' but it may be so bad that in a sleeve you may be able to tell what it is.  For example, hard creases, tears, water damage, gouges, major scrapes/scuffs, etc.  Basically, any card that would be hard to hide the damage, even when sleeved. 

 

Now for the tricky part.. Light Play & Moderate Play

Light Play -- At arm length, it would appear NM/MT, but upon closer inspection does not meet the standard.  It may have light surface wear on the front/back and a light edge chips or mild shuffle wear.

Moderate Play -- This card has more pronounced surface wear on the front/back and may have edge chipping or whitening or shuffle wear.  Basically, a step up from Heavy Play, but not quite clean enough to be considered light play.