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January 15, 2026ProxyMTG announced the launch of its redesigned website and ordering flow, built around a simple idea: if someone can paste a decklist and click “Add Cards,” they should be able to get clean, readable MTG proxy / playtest cards without treating it like a weekend-long craft project.
The new site, currently available for preview at deploy.proxymtg.com and moving later today to ProxyMTG.com, centers on a print-on-demand workflow. Instead of shopping a limited inventory, customers browse sets, search for specific cards, or upload a decklist, then ProxyMTG prints the order after it’s placed.
“Most people don’t want a proxy ‘process,’ they want cards that shuffle normally, read clearly, and don’t create a weird social mini-game at the table,” said ProxyMTG. “So we built the site around the parts that matter: finding cards fast, controlling quantities, seeing pricing tiers, and tracking the order without spelunking through your email filters.”
How the new ProxyMTG site works
1) Pick cards your way: browse sets, search, or decklist upload
The redesigned navigation is intentionally blunt: go to Sets to browse by release, or use Print Proxies to search the card database or upload a decklist and start building an order. The goal is to reduce friction for the two most common real-world behaviors: “I’m printing a whole list” and “I’m filling gaps.”
2) Build an order in the Order Builder
From the Print Proxies page, customers can start an order and use the Order Builder to load cards, add them to a list, and adjust quantities. It’s designed for normal deckbuilding reality, like realizing you actually need four copies, or that your Commander deck has turned into a 103-card “concept.”
3) Transparent tiered pricing (so bulk doesn’t feel like a punishment)
ProxyMTG’s new page layout puts tiered pricing front and center, so customers can see how price-per-card changes as the order grows, from a handful of singles to a full deck and beyond. This is especially aimed at the most common proxy use case: testing a deck before buying expensive staples, or upgrading a Commander list without turning game night into a budget meeting.
4) Print-on-demand production, not pre-printed pulls
ProxyMTG’s model prints orders after purchase. That print-on-demand approach is also what enables customization options like custom backs and custom art (with clear guardrails to prevent deceptive use).
5) Order tracking that doesn’t rely on perfect inbox hygiene
The new Order Tracking page lets customers check status by entering their billing email and order number, which helps when automated emails land in spam, promotions, or the void where unread receipts go to retire.
What’s coming next: “Design Your Own”
ProxyMTG also previewed an upcoming “Design Your Own” feature, intended to let customers upload artwork, adjust layouts, and create personalized proxy designs. The company emphasized that customization is meant for play and personalization, not for misrepresentation, and that requests intended to mimic authenticity marks or enable deception will be rejected.
Contact:
Kit Yarrow
Editor
Bentonville, AR
support@proxymtg.com

