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Sorare MLB Game Week 25 Strategy & Advice: June 21 (2023)

Sorare MLB Game Week 25 Strategy & Advice: June 21 (2023)

Welcome to Sorare, a revolutionary fantasy baseball game and marketplace. Sorare: MLB is a free-to-play fantasy baseball game with officially licensed digital trading cards. Unlike other fantasy baseball platforms, fantasy managers are in complete control of their fantasy experience – scouting, buying, selling, and competing with player cards each week of the season. Win or lose; you still own your cards.

Sorare: MLB competitions occur twice weekly. One slate is from Monday to Thursday, while the other is from Friday to Sunday. Game weeks start 10 minutes before the first game of the slate.

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Sorare: Game Week 25

How it works

When you sign up for Sorare, you will be able to build your initial team for free by choosing a team of 10 players. You can choose three starting pitchers, one reliever, two corner infielders, two middle infielders, and two outfielders while staying under the 120 budget.

When you enter a competition, you will choose one starter, one reliever, one corner infielder, one middle infielder, one outfielder, one hitting flex, and one open flex that can be any player but Shohei Ohtani (for obvious reasons).

The Cards

There are different types of cards, starting with Common cards. There are unlimited Common cards to ensure anyone can play Sorare totally free, but the restriction is that Common cards cannot be bought, sold, or traded on the marketplace. The next levels of rarity are as follows: Limited, Rare, Super Rare, and Unique. The are 5000 copies of each Limited card, 1,000 of each Rare, 100 of each Super Rare, and just one of each Unique.

The higher rarity or scarcity cards grant you eligibility for other fun competitions that you will see are locked when you look for competitions to enter your all Common card lineup into. These Scarcity card types can be won as rewards for high placements in competitions but can also be obtained through the Sorare: MLB marketplace.

There are two places to buy cards in the marketplace, Card Auctions and Manager Sales. Card auctions are like they sound. A card is listed, and the highest bidder at the end of the timer acquires the card. Manager sales is a direct peer-to-peer marketplace where you can buy listed cards from other managers.

The Competitions

At the end of Game Weeks, managers who rank at or near the top of competitions will win rewards such as Scarcity cards, game tickets, merchandise, signed jerseys, and VIP experiences. The higher you finish, the better the rewards. Prizes will vary from week to week.

There are quite a few Common card competitions to choose from, and new for this season, there are four Limited card competitions for each slate, three Rare card competitions, two Super Rare competitions, and one Unique card competition. Each of these competitions has entry requirements and restrictions. All Sorare competitions are free-to-play.

Tips for new teams

Studs and duds is the correct strategy. I may have spent a little too high at pitcher, especially considering the number of pitchers I got as options in free swaps and as rewards for competitions. I likely would have been fine with just deGrom, or even Strider as my main starter and an additional low-cost option to pair with Kopech. Pitchers do score extremely well, but when they have a bad game, they are a big drain on your team in this sort of multi-day competition.

Use your Free Swap. I use my free swap every day. Unfortunately, the free swap is not at a set time but is set at 24 hours after your previous swap. This has resulted in my swap time being pushed by hours every day. This could be solved by setting an alarm, but that is just an option for those who feel so inclined. You can cancel your swap if you do not like any of the alternatives offered, so there is zero harm in seeing what RNG presents you with. The latest update offers users the ability to choose a position for your free Common card swap.

Join the 100 percent reward competitions if you are still at the Common card competition level. Those who buy a pack(s) should be sure to join competitions at each level, i.e., Common and Limited. Common card managers should exhaust their Minor League eligibility first.

Observe the marketplace. Some may choose to go the completely free-to-play route, but for those looking to build a squad of Limited or higher rarity cards, understanding what is happening in the market over several days is recommended. There is more overall supply of each player every subsequent week, which should, in turn, affect fair market value.

Go for low-cost pitchers when starting your team. The major thing I have noticed since starting my team is the abundance of pitchers available in swaps and as rewards for competitions. I added multiple ace types for free, so blowing the majority of my 120 budget on pitchers proved to be a mistake I will suffer for all season.

If planning to purchase a Starter Pack, try to strike as soon as they get listed in order to get the best potential player combination. You will also want to wait until players of interest make it into packs. You will never see the elite of the elite included, but you can land some really good players if you are patient and selective.

My lineups

Injuries remain the theme for my teams, but that is fantasy baseball. I have added two strong Common cards in Luis Arraez and Kenley Jansen while also hitting the marketplace for the AL outfielder and reliever I needed to compete in the Limited AL tournaments. The lower field size gives me some hope that I will be able to use this as a path with less resistance as far as placing high enough weekly to actually start to build my Limited roster without additional spending. With that said, I may have to upgrade my OF situation if Ward cools down.

Common Roster

Starting Pitcher: Jacob deGrom, Spencer Strider, Luis Castillo, Sandy Alcantara, MacKenzie Gore, Michael Kopech, Justin Verlander, Kodai Senga, Alex Cobb, Drew Smyly, Patrick Corbin
Relief Pitcher: Aroldis Chapman, Reynaldo Lopez, Erasmo Ramirez, Kenley Jansen
Corner Infielder: Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Eloy Jimenez, Justin Turner, Jose Abreu, Carlos Santana, Will Brennan
Middle Infielder: Oneil Cruz, Gleyber Torres, Brandon Lowe, Geraldo Perdomo, Francisco Alvarez, Ketel Marte, Ryan McMahon, Nick Madrigal, J.T. Realmuto, Tony Kemp, Luis Arraez
Outfielder: Esteury Ruiz, Cody Bellinger, George Springer, Tyler O’Neil, Charlie Blackmon, Stone Garrett, Tommy Pham, Whit Merrifield, Andrew McCutchen, Corey Julks

Limited Roster

Starting Pitcher: Jose Berrios, Marco Gonzalez, Michael Kopech
Relief Pitcher: Luis Garcia, Trevor Gott, Connor Brogdon, Jordan Romano
Corner Infielder: Josh Donaldson, Matt Chapman
Middle Infielder: Tim Anderson, Elias Diaz, Bo Bichette, Kolten Wong
Outfielder: Stone Garrett, Charlie Blackmon, Tommy Pham, Taylor Ward

Game Week 25 should be an exciting one. While injuries still limit my lineup choices, I am for the most part choosing between good options instead of deciding between the best of the leftover healthy players. I now have enough players to field two Common lineups, one Limited AL lineup, and one training lineup. I was not taking advantage of training as much as I should, but now that I have enough players remaining that are worth training (including some Limited’s) and thus gaining XP, I will be fielding a lineup each week.

For the Common All-Star tournament, I will start Strider, Jansen, Guerrero, Marte, Ruiz, Turner, and Senga. For the Common Minors tournament, I will start Gore, Chapman, Jimenez, McMahon, Springer, Arraez, and Corbin. I will start Berrios, Romano, Chapman, Ward, Donaldson, and Anderson for the Limited AL tournament. Last but not least, I will be training my Limited Kopech, Garcia, and Diaz and my Common Abreu, Bellinger, Torres, and Lopez. Be sure to make use of training if you have enough players, and good luck on Game Week 25 at Sorare.

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Raju Byfield is a featured writer for FantasyPros. For more from Raju, check out his profile and follow him @FantasyContext.

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