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When I ask people what I should write about next there is a recurrent topic and that is Trading and bots on Magic Online. I already wrote a few tips about trading but never really wrote one dedicated article to actual trading. I will give it a try this time. This is what the trade window actually looks like.
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I recommend setting the display to card view instead of pile view because then you can see which version of a card you are getting or trading away. I loan decks and getting back the correct versions of cards is something I can't take for granted - many players just put some version of a card in the trade binder. Magic Online is a client that allows us to play the game - Magic: The Gathering - online.
We can look at it as a simulation of the paper game in a digital world. With that Magic Online also brings an economy that it shares similarities with the paper game. We have to understand that there is a secondary market. In paper, we buy our singles from online or brick and mortar stores, but also from other players. On Magic Online, we also have the possibility to buy singles from online stores or players. During our trades most of the time we won't be dealing with an actual person (referred as human) but computer scripts that operate Magic Online user account (bots). Bots use some kind of price lists and behavior and change prices accordingly, they increase a price when they sell too many copies of a certain card etc.
For those players that actively trade, knowing how a certain bot functions and within what time frame it changes its price lists, is something that will make it easier to figure out when to sell or buy cards. There are different levels to trading depending on what kind of a player you are (value-centric or not) and how much time you actually have (a student with a lot of free time or a father of two kids). Many players when introduced to competitive Magic often complain about not having a degree in economics because keeping up with prices, selling, buying and trading is something that scares them and eats up a lot of time. On the other hand when a player is fully invested in the game they usually know how the Magic economy works. It is not a required of us to buy and sell cards in order to profit but if we don't do this to some extent we might end up losing a lot of money - or rather Magic becomes a very expensive hobby. New players are usually totally overwhelmed with this aspect and players that do not have much time because they have kids and wish to play a match or two during the evening will usually do the minimum trading possible (they usually have the money to spend). On Magic Online we can also find traders.
There are many in the real world and for some trading on Magic Online can be appealing. Trading on Magic Online has its pros because you don't need to physically handle cards, you don't need to physically locate them, pack them, ship them, wait for them to arrive etc.

You also don't need to worry about condition. You also do not need to pay any kind of commission for sold items, deal with any other kind of fees, meet people to be paid in cash etc (and I don't even talk about preparing you inventory - opening boxes, sorting cards, pricing them and putting them up for sale, dealing with people at events etc.). On Magic Online we can trade daily even though there are certain times one should be really active and times when it's pretty much useless.
In order to become a good trader we need to know how the economy works, how Magic Online works, how the bots work. That also requires a lot of knowledge. You need to be checking prices pretty much all the time, be fast at selling/buying etc.