The cards will lose value regardless, but the quick sell won't. makes perfect sense if you do not have the discipline to save coins, or if you have a coin spending son sharing your account.
Quote from Magkneezum >> I pulled an 80 ovr Kyle Fuller that QS for 20K.. he normally goes for 8-9k.. so I put him on the AH for 27K, so the person that buys him gets him for 7K, I think this is a good idea if you can buy a player for technically cheaper than their current market price is...
underrated point for both the buyer and seller!
Quote from CardinalsFitz11 >> How do they determine quick sell value?
Overall
I pulled an 80 ovr Kyle Fuller that QS for 20K.. he normally goes for 8-9k.. so I put him on the AH for 27K, so the person that buys him gets him for 7K, I think this is a good idea if you can buy a player for technically cheaper than their current market price is...
been waiting for the 92 K to drop to about 520k.....scoop him up now....and use him all year and quicksell him for 500k
now that would be smart yes but theres so many more factors. paying more like that hurts you buying other players... only time i could justify it is if its a good 89 that you power up and plan on having for a while
doesnt it make more sense to buy a 200,000 coin player that quicksells for 160,000 instead of buying one that doesnt? basically the card is 40k and protects your future like an investment, right?
EDIT: And if you put the coin player in power up, can you get him back as a coin player?
doesnt it make more sense to buy a 200,000 coin player that quicksells for 160,000 instead of buying one that doesnt? basically the card is 40k and protects your future like an investment, right?
EDIT: And if you put the coin player in power up, can you get him back as a coin player?