Last updated on June 16, 2026

Gaea's Cradle | Illustration by Mark Zug
Though Magic cards are mere slips of cardboard with ink and a glossy finish, the right card can be worth absurd sums of money to the right buyer. One such person posted in the MTG Misprints/Miscuts/Oddities Facebook group, hunting down an incredibly unique card: A textless foil Gaea's Cradle Judge promo, and theyโre willing to pay $70,000 for itโplus a $3,000 finder's fee to anybody who can help broker the deal.

Source: Facebook.com
While this isnโt the most a card has ever gone for (itโs going to be hard to top Post Maloneโs purchase of the 1:1 The One Ring), itโs still an immense price tag attached to a unique piece of Magic history.
What Is Gaeaโs Cradle?
For new players unfamiliar with the old Magic, Gaea's Cradle is one of the gameโs most iconic and powerful lands. The ability to tap for equal to each creature you control spirals into obscenity with just a few turns. Itโs currently a Legacy staple, where Elfball decks use it to power out fast Craterhoof Behemoths and the odd Maverick list plays an assortment of creatures.
It also sees a fair amount of cEDH play as an incredible form of fast mana or part of a combo finish; itโs pretty easy to turn a land that taps for 7 mana into infinite mana, typically with Emiel the Blessed. Itโs such a power house that itโs on the Commander Game Changers list.
Is The Textless Gaeaโs Cradle a Misprint?
While a card without text seems like a misprint, this Gaeaโs Cradle is actually a test print from Urzaโs Saga, which is completely differentโeven though the result looks like a messed up Magic card.
โMisprintโ refers to a card that has been improperly printed at some point in the printing process. Misprints are often highly valued by collectors, and come in a variety in forms. A miscut is extremely common, which is when a cardโs boarder is somehow improperly cut. This often means one of the four borders is a little too thick and the opposite a little too thin, off-centering the actual card, but the most dramatic miscuts can reveal another card entirely.
Other misprints include cards with the wrong art, with the text layer shifted above or below (or even overlapping) the symbols layer, crimping where the card was caught in the packโs seal, and even more complex misprintsโplayers were recently finding misprints with impressions of Pokรฉmon art!
Test prints are distinct from misprints because most flaws in the art are intentional. Wizards of the Coast will order test prints to ensure the design they have in mind prints well; you can only tell so much from a computer screen or concept sketch.
The textless Gaeaโs Cradle falls into this category. I could only find evidence of one textless Gaeaโs Cradle, which is owned by Chris Wilson (of Path to Exile fame, not to be mistaken with Path of Exile). He posted a YouTube video showcasing it, along with a selection of other stellar, rare lands:

Source: YouTube.com
Interestingly, Wilson mentions in the video that he was once offered and turned down a $70,000 cash proposal for this Cradle.
Other Unique Gaeaโs Cradles
The textless Cradle is far from the only unique misprint, and isnโt even the only on in Wilsonโs collection. He also showed off these lovely shifted Cradles, with the text shifted just above where it should be:

Source: YouTube.com
He also showed off some dramatically miscut Gaeaโs Cradles:

Source: YouTube.com
If youโre feeling jealous, AncestralMTG, a shop that specializes in rare, high-end Magic collectables, has a miscut foil Cradle on their storefront:

Source: Ancestralmtg.com
Itโll only set you back $20,000. Who needs a car anyway?
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