Darkest Hour
Darkest Hour is a Rare Enchantment from Seventh Edition (128) in Magic: The Gathering. Mana cost {B}. Color identity: B. Cactaur's latest catalog snapshot shows a market reference near $4.58 for ungraded copies.
Who is this card for?
Darkest Hour suits collectors and players working on Seventh Edition who need the Rare slot. Legal in legacy, vintage, commander, oathbreaker. Confirm the exact printing and language before buying for a deck list.
What is Darkest Hour from Seventh Edition?
Darkest Hour is a Enchantment in Seventh Edition numbered 128. Mana cost {B}. Color identity: B. Darkest Hour (128) is a format-relevant Enchantment in Seventh Edition with legality in legacy, vintage, commander, oathbreaker. Deck demand and reprint risk often explain price as much as rarity alone.
What is Darkest Hour worth today?
Cactaur tracks a market reference near $4.58 for Darkest Hour. Low and high spread runs $4.58 to null. Per-finish references: cardmarket: $2.47; Normal: $4.58. This printing is from Seventh Edition. Collector number 128 distinguishes this printing from same-name cards in other sets.
| Set | Seventh Edition |
|---|---|
| Number | 128 |
| Rarity | Rare |
| TCGPlayer USD | $4.58 |
| Cardmarket EUR | €2.47 |
| cardmarket | $2.47 |
| Normal | $4.58 |
Card stats
| Colors | B |
|---|
How collectible is Darkest Hour?
Darkest Hour is a Rare printing in Seventh Edition. Commander demand can sustain prices even when Standard supply is deep. This printing is from Seventh Edition. Collector number 128 distinguishes this printing from same-name cards in other sets. Catalogued rarity: Rare. The set released in 2001.
What are the key details for Darkest Hour?
Darkest Hour lists as Enchantment. Artist: Ciruelo. Rules text is indexed in the catalog for search and deck research. This printing is from Seventh Edition. Collector number 128 distinguishes this printing from same-name cards in other sets. Catalogued rarity: Rare. The set released in 2001.
Cactaur's take
Darkest Hour (128) is a format-relevant Enchantment in Seventh Edition with legality in legacy, vintage, commander, oathbreaker. Deck demand and reprint risk often explain price as much as rarity alone.
Pros
- Darkest Hour is catalogued as Rare Enchantment in Seventh Edition, making set and collector number verification straightforward.
- Public market data shows a reference near $4.58 across finishes (cardmarket: $2.47; Normal: $4.58).
- Mana cost {B} and type line Enchantment help deck builders confirm the correct printing quickly.
Cons
- Raw market prices vary by condition and finish — near-mint estimates are not slab grades.
Verdict: Use $4.58 as a benchmark, then adjust for finish, grade, and how quickly you need to buy or sell.
FAQ
What is Darkest Hour from Seventh Edition?
Darkest Hour is a Rare Enchantment from Seventh Edition numbered 128 in Magic: The Gathering. Cactaur indexes set, rarity, mana cost, and market references for this printing.
How much is Darkest Hour worth?
Cactaur's catalog snapshot shows a market reference near $4.58 for ungraded Darkest Hour. Condition, finish, and recent sold comps can move realized prices above or below that benchmark.
What rarity is Darkest Hour?
Darkest Hour is catalogued as Rare in Seventh Edition. Use the collector number and set symbol on listings to confirm you are buying this exact printing.
Is Darkest Hour legal in Commander or Standard?
Darkest Hour shows format legality in legacy, vintage, commander, oathbreaker based on our latest ingest. Always verify the exact printing and ban-list updates before registering a deck for an event.
Should I buy Darkest Hour near mint or played?
Near-mint copies command the catalog reference near $4.58. Heavily played copies trade lower unless the card is a chase rare where any clean copy is scarce.
Related cards
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- Storm Crow — Seventh Edition
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