TCGplayer Guide: Upgrading Dance of the Elements and Blight Curse
TCGplayer's upgrade guide outlines budget to all-in swaps for Dance of the Elements and Blight Curse, helping players prioritize upgrades and avoid bad buys.

Dance of the Elements and Blight Curse, the Lorwyn Eclipsed preconstructed decks, present clear upgrade pathways that let you keep a casual table or push toward higher consistency and power. This guide lays out low-cost, mid-tier, and all-in upgrade tracks for each deck, highlights the archetype pieces that will attract demand, and offers shopping advice so you get the most play for your dollars.
Out of the box, Dance of the Elements leans into evoke value and token synergies while Blight Curse centers on -1/-1 counter subthemes and incremental sacrifice value. For Dance, start with upgrades that improve consistency: add Panharmonicon-style effects to double triggers, and prioritize ramp and color-fixing such as Animar-style inclusion or equivalent options so you can reliably hit evoke chains. Mid-tier and all-in swaps should focus on cards that convert tokens into card advantage or repeated value, turning ephemeral creatures into recurring resources rather than one-shot attackers.
Blight Curse benefits from a different sequence. Low-cost upgrades increase the efficiency of -1/-1 synergies and shore up removal to protect your board plan. Mid-tier improvements include tight synergies that exploit counters and add repeatable sacrifice outlets. All-in moves aim for Necroskitter-style interactions and multiple value engines that both weaponize counters and turn creature deaths into net advantage. Across both lists, prioritize cards that lift consistency before splurging on single high-power staples.
Expect market movement around interactive staples tied to these upgrades. Demand will likely rise for Panharmonicon-style effects, Animar-level ramp and fixing, Necroskitter-style cards, and efficient sacrifice engines. That does not mean you must chase every spike. Buy the pieces that change how the deck functions first: mana and fixing, trigger doublers, and the engines that turn small effects into sustained advantage.
Shop smart to get the best value. Buy singles rather than full booster-season lots, compare buylist and trade options, and stagger purchases: secure key ramp and fixing first, then fill in synergies as you playtest. Avoid hasty all-in buys immediately after release; prices often normalize after the initial demand wave. Consider trading cards you no longer use to fund upgrades and prioritize mid-tier cards that unlock multiple lines of play over single flashy rares.
These upgrade tracks let you decide whether these Lorwyn Eclipsed precons remain casual table staples or become tuned threat engines. Prioritize consistency, pick the archetype pieces that matter most to each deck, and watch the market for the staples that will matter next.
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