Four of Hunt

Four of Hunt rests on the table like a witness to a long night, its ivory face softly warmed by lamplight. The illustration is a study in motion: a lean hunter stepping through ferns just as a stag lifts its head, breath curling in the cold air. Copper-bronze ink traces the scene with careful restraint, the lines thin as a blade edge, the shading a whisper rather than a shout. In the corners, four small vignettes—one of a hound tightening its circle, one of a snare half-buried in moss, one of a caravan shadowed by pines, one of a campfire that has long since cooled—mark the stages of a chase remembered, not merely pursued. The card’s texture is almost tactile: a vellum surface creased and worn by hands that have thumbed through countless stories, its back a field of mottled green that hides a signature hide-stamp of the old Huntwrights. If you close your eyes and tilt it to the light, the stag’s silhouette seems to shimmer, as if the creature might barrel forward or melt away into wood and wind. Lore has it that Four of Hunt is not a standalone charm but a piece of a quartet—the Four of Hunt, the Four of Stalk, the Four of Echo, the Four of Night. Each card embodies a season of pursuit and a facet of memory: the moment of keen sight, the trap sprung, the caravan’s whispered routes, the comfort of a return to fire and kin. To hold Four of Hunt is to feel the pulse of a chase you never quite finished, to sense the world’s storytelling thread pulling you toward a decision at the edge of a crossroads. In practice, those who carry it learn to trust its subtle hints. In the thick grove, it might nudge you toward a track you would otherwise overlook; in a ruin’s vault, it can tilt a negotiation with a wary scavenger; at the camp’s edge, it can soften a wary NPC enough to reveal a clue rather than a weapon. It doesn’t command—it's more a patient invitation, a reminder that every hunt is a negotiation with time itself. In daily trading and in field-use alike, Four of Hunt has a reputation for turning chance into direction. The world’s traders say the card’s value lies not in its gold or its art but in what it carries: a memory of a successful chase, a map drawn by instinct. When a hunter lays it down before a dawn vigil, the world seems to lean in—tracks become clearer, a breeze carries the scent of a distant quarry, and a small glimmer of luck seems to align with your steps. It is not luck alone, but a conversation you’ve learned to have with the world. And then there is Saddlebag Exchange, where the card travels between pockets and palms as reliably as a compass needle. A worn Four of Hunt might fetch a modest handful of silver from a collector who preserves its edge; a pristine example, with the green back uncreased and the copper ink still glinting, might draw a more patient buyer—a keeper of stories—who offers a fee in gold and a promise to guard it through many winters. The marketplace hums with that delicate math of desire and memory, and the Four of Hunt sits at the center, a tangible thread tying the past to the paths still waiting to be walked.

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Minimum Price

87.78

Historic Price

41.03

Current Market Value

93,836

Historic Market Value

43,861

Sales Per Day

1,069

Percent Change

113.94%

Current Quantity

1,694

Average Quantity

1,107

Avg v Current Quantity

153.03%

Four of Hunt : Auctionhouse Listings

Price
Quantity
49,997.0512
5,0001
500447
179.986
179.9715
176.386
176.3713
170.3728
150.3720
150.2218
150.141
1453
1405
138.633
13856
136.623
1301
129.6253
128.627
128.616
128.62
125.3323
120.991
120.335
120.3230
120.217
120.155
120.1426
120.137
120102
11518
114.9911
113.561
111.791
11035
10915
108.9967
108.9192
108.7950
108.7819
108.7716
105.7713
103.6612
1031
1029
101.931
101.8771
101.8617
10136
10025
99.991
9833
9531
94.663
88.6613
87.7821