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Super Rugby Pacific Fantasy is back for 2026, and the powers that be have decided that our lives were far too peaceful. They have introduced a feature that will turn your casual Tuesday team selection into a high-stakes financial crisis meeting, Variable Player Pricing.

Super Rugby Pacific Fantasy is back for 2026, and the powers that be have decided that our lives were far too peaceful. They have introduced a feature that will turn your casual Tuesday team selection into a high-stakes financial crisis meeting, Variable Player Pricing.
If you thought the crypto crash of 2022 was stressful, wait until you check your Fantasy team value after your starting tighthead prop gets yellow-carded in the 12th minute.
That’s right. The days of "set and forget" are dead.
This season, player prices will fluctuate round-by-round based on on-field performance. It is essentially the stock market, but instead of trading Apple or Tesla, you are trading durable tight-five forwards and erratic wingers.
The premise is simple but brutal. If your player has a blinder—scores a try, makes 15 tackles, beats defenders, his price goes up. If he has a quiet week (or spends 10 minutes in the bin thinking about his life choices), his value tanks.
The $100 million salary cap remains unchanged, which means inflation has officially hit Super Rugby.
The market opened this morning, and the "Blue Chip" stocks are already eye-wateringly expensive. Damian McKenzie is the Bitcoin of the competition—volatile, exciting, and currently trading at a staggering $12 million.
If you want the Chiefs' Smiling Assassin in your portfolio, you are going to have to make cuts elsewhere. This is where the headline comes in.
With McKenzie, Billy Proctor ($11.1m), and Caleb Tangitau ($11.0m) eating up your cap space, you can’t afford a team of superstars. You need value. You need stability. You need props.
While the glamour backs are the "Crypto" coins, soaring one week, crashing the next, a hardworking prop like the Force’s Carlo Tizzano ($9.8m) is your government bond. He turns up, he makes his tackles, he hits his rucks, and he delivers steady returns.
You are no longer just a coach; you are a portfolio manager. Do you risk your capital on a rookie winger (a penny stock) hoping he bags a hat-trick so you can sell him high next week? Or do you sink your funds into a veteran hooker who will reliably score you 20 points without ever touching the ball in open play?
According to Super Rugby HQ, 83 per cent of existing players voted in favour of this change. Fans clearly crave the anxiety of watching your team value plummet in real-time.
Super Rugby Pacific CEO Jack Mesley seems thrilled about our impending stress.
"Variable player pricing delivers an additional layer of strategy, levelling up the challenge," Mesley said, essentially telling us that the "easy mode" has been turned off.
"We heard from fans that Fantasy drove them to watch more Super Rugby Pacific, both in person and on broadcast. We value fan feedback, and the team carefully considered which changes to introduce for 2026 to deliver the biggest impact for Fantasy players at all levels of the game,” he said
"I look forward to seeing how fans will adapt to these changes," Mesley added.
Dust off the spreadsheets and fire up the group chat. The market is open, the volatility is real, and if you don't trade smart, you'll be priced out of the market by Round 4.
Forget Dogecoin. I’m putting my life savings on a Crusaders loose forward.
Top 5 Most Expensive Assets to Start 2026:
Damian McKenzie (Chiefs): $12.0m
Billy Proctor (Hurricanes): $11.1m
Caleb Tangitau (Highlanders): $11.0m
Carlo Tizzano (Force): $9.8m
Sevu Reece (Crusaders): $9.3m