What do the columns mean?
for specifics on how the high, low, average, and standard deviation columns relate to the price column. Second, unusually large “high” values often represent individual specimins of a card which have some special quality that makes them more valuable than they would otherwise be. For example, a mint-condition Fireball from the Alpha edition might, to a collector, be worth much much more than a 6th edition Fireball. Or, perhaps the card is signed by the artist, or has some type of unusual printing error. All those sorts of factors can work to increase the value of individual specimins of a card far beyond more ordinary copies of that card. Relatedly, if you find that a sale or auction quotes prices from my lists, but when you check for yourself you find that the seller or auctioneer has quoted the number from the “high” column rather than the “price” column, you should stop to ask yourself why.
Related Questions
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