When you think of basic lands in Magic: the Gathering, value isn’t often something you associate with them. Every set has basic lands, and most players have an excess of them. Stores will even have giant boxes full of lands that they’re more than willing to give away with the sheer volume of basic lands you get just from opening a box or two.
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However, some basic lands can fetch a high price tag. Some lands are harder to get, be it because they were exclusive rewards for certain programs or simply because they’re in older sets that are very hard to obtain now.
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Limited Edition Beta #295
Market Price: $30.24
Limited Edition Beta (generally shortened to just Beta) was the second-ever Magic release. It was a re-release of Alpha (the original Magic set) that was released after the first Alpha run was sold out. The sets are almost identical, with Beta having a few extra cards that were missing from Alpha’s original run (most notably, Volcanic Island).
This basic Swamp is actually the cheapest of the basic Swamps available in Beta. Despite this, it’s still more valuable than the wide majority of any other basic lands available in the game.
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Judge Gift Cards 2023
Market Price: $30.72
Also known more commonly as Judge promos, Judge Gift Cards are special cards that were given out to those a part of Magic’s Judge program as a thank you for helping run events. This took the form of a large variety of cards, ranging from powerful staples to basic lands.
The 2023 cycle had the basic five lands, each featuring an owl known as Archie the Owl from the card Judge’s Familiar. They are full art and foil, giving them extra value to their already high-value thanks to their exclusivity to Judges.
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Limited Edition Beta #294
Market Price: $32.76
Another Swamp from Limited Edition Beta, it is the ‘middle’ of the three basic Swamps in the set in terms of value. The cards in Beta were different from Alpha due to different printing technologies being used. The corners of the cards in Beta were different, being rounded 4mm ones as opposed to a half inch.
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Back in the day, because Alpha used a different printing technique, you couldn’t use Alpha cards in your deck unless your entire deck consisted of Alpha cards. They would be considered marked otherwise. As such, using Beta lands was the optimal play since you could use expansion sets with them.
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Limited Edition Beta #296
Market Price: $36.27
With the release of Beta, every basic land type received a new land with new art. Originally, Alpha only had two different arts, and while those arts returned for Beta, they came with an extra new land for players to use for their basics.
This led to the #296 basic Swamp being the most valuable Swamp from the Beta set. All the Swamps from Beta were done by Dan Frazier, who hasn’t done a ton of work in Magic’s later years but did provide art for various Signets, Talisman, and Moxen for Secret Lair and Mystery Booster 2.
6
European Land Program #15
Market Price: $39.31
The European Land Program was a unique promotion that was available in the 2000s Nemesis, Prophecy, and Invasion sets. They were artwork that featured land art inspired by locations in that region. The only way to get these lands was to buy a box of the aforementioned sets and mail it to a distributor to receive a booster pack with a land in it.
With all the hoops one had to jump through just to acquire these lands, all while only being available in Europe, made this a highly valuable basic Swamp. It wasn’t easy to get back then, and it still isn’t easy to get now.
5
Asia Pacific Land Program #10
Market Price: $51.40
The Asia Pacific Land Program pre-dates the European Land Program and was part of a promotion for 1997’s Tempest set. Like the Euro lands, the APAC (Asia-Pacific) lands had art inspired by areas in the real world in the region they were available in. You had to buy a box of Tempest to actually get the pack that contained the basic land.
The Asia Pacific Land Program only lasted for one set (Tempest), making them one of the rarest basic Swamps you can get. While they aren’t the most expensive Swamp, they are one of the more storied basic lands you can own.
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Limited Edition Alpha #291
Market Price: $53.62
Released in 1993, Limited Edition Alpha (more commonly referred to as simply Alpha) was the first ever set released for Magic: the Gathering. The set has many iconic cards and some of the more expensive and rare cards in the entire history of the game.
A pack of Alpha is going to cost you a ton of money, and just one basic Swamp from Alpha is expensive. Even though there have been countless Swamps since the original Swamp in Alpha, it’s still one of the most expensive Swamps you can own.
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Judge Gift Cards 2014
Market Price: $57.57
The Judge Gift Cards in 2014 were the first time basic lands were given out as a part of the Judge Gift program. It was also the third time a land ever used full art (the first two being Unglued—the first Un-set and Zendikar).
The Judge Gift cards were all foil, and is only one of the two times basics were given out to Judges (the other being in 2023 with the Owl lands). With its unique place in history as an early full art card, and inaccessibility to most players, this basic Swamp is the most valuable full art Swamp you can own.
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Limited Edition Alpha #290
Market Price: $64.77
The #290 Swamp in Alpha is the most valuable Swamp that didn’t require any special position or location to acquire. It simply came in Alpha booster packs, so anyone was able to get them. That doesn’t mean it’s cheap, it’s the second most expensive Swamp in the game.
What makes the Alpha lands especially unique is their different printing technique from future sets. Future sets used more rounded corners, whereas Alpha’s had more squared ones. As such, these Alpha lands are one of the most unique ones in the game.
1
Guru
Market Price: $989.95
The Guru lands were a cycle of lands given out to those who were a part of the Guru Program. The Guru Program was only around from July 1999 and stopped taking in new members in October 2000 before closing down in early 2001. The program was intended to help experts in Magic teach new players how to play. They would be given identification numbers that would show they were successful when the new player redeemed a rebate.
You were given Guru points, and for each ten points, you’d receive a randomly chosen land. It required 50 points to have a full set. With how hard the lands were to get, and the very small window of being able to get them, the Guru Swamp is the most valuable Swamp by a considerable margin.
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