Search in Classifieds
Search in Groups
Search in Polls
Search in Members
Search in Members
Search in News
Search in Polls
Search in Businesses
Search in Contests
Search in Events
Search in Music Albums
Search in Music Songs
Search in Quotes
Search in Site Team
Search in Jobs
Search in Products
Search in Products
3 minutes, 51 seconds
-10 Views 0 Comments 0 Likes 0 Reviews
Every new cycle, Diamond Dynasty does the same thing: it wipes your progress and hands you a lineup that feels like it belongs in a tutorial. You can shrug and accept it, or you can set yourself up before the reset even happens. That's why I've been paying attention to the Now and Later content, even when I'm "done" with the old game. If you'd rather skip the slow start altogether, some players just buy MLB The Show 26 stubs and get straight to building, but the smart part is knowing you've got options.
Here's what people miss: those carry-over packs aren't just a few freebies, they're a head start on the market. When everyone's scrambling for basic golds and usable bullpen arms, extra pulls turn into instant liquidity. You open packs, you sell the duplicates, and suddenly you're not forced into boring moments just to afford a halfway decent setup man. It's not glamorous. It's just practical. And in the first couple of hours, practical beats "I'll grind later" every time.
I tried this the hard way. Two accounts, same day, same amount of time. One started cold. The other had finished Now and Later missions in the previous title. The second account wasn't magically better at the game—it just had stuff to work with. Within about two hours, it was sitting on roughly 45K more stubs after flipping off duplicate silvers and golds from those early packs. Meanwhile the fresh account was still stuck choosing between a starter who can't locate and a catcher with zero pop.
If you're going to do it, focus on the last content push: the specific missions and that final Conquest map. That's where the real value usually hides. This year, the standout is Diamond Carlos Beltran. A switch-hitting outfielder who can actually play defense tends to be scarce early, and scarcity is what drives prices. Getting Beltran without paying the launch-week tax frees your stubs for pitching, bench bats, or whatever the meta decides is broken in week one.
Still, don't pretend the grind always feels good. After months of playing, another long Conquest run can feel like clocking in. If you're cooked, it's fine to protect your hype for the new release and skip it. Plenty of competitive players do a mix: they grab the easiest Now and Later rewards, then fill the gap with the market or a quick top-up of MLB 26 stubs so they aren't rolling into Opening Day with a roster full of placeholders.
We are a close community to help to meet and greet new people.
We are a secure community with 5000+ active members who help you with your queries, post new updates and grow your network.

Share this page with your family and friends.