it's $20 to enter, and right now it's the only league i pay for. i'd say that if you're looking for a thing you can spend a few minutes on each week, and let your team run itself while you occasionally check in on it, the league probably isn't for you. rather, if you've played your share of yahoo or espn leagues and are looking for something that rewards you for putting more time and care into it - beyond just lucking into a good draft slot - then it might be a good fit. i think that as much as the game is about getting good plyers, it's really at least as much about getting good value out of your players. the basics are, it's a 12-team league, auction-draft, with rotisserie scoring. this particular league is a SABR-roto 4x4 scoring system, where you get ranked by R, HR, OBP, SLG and SO, ERA, WHIP, HR/9. you have a 40-player roster to deal with, including stashing minor leaguers, and are allotted $400 to field your team. it's also a keeper league, where player salaries automatically increment $2 each year. on top of that, there's a wrinkle of arbitration, where at the end of the season, you get a handful of dollars to assign to plyers on other teams to make their salaries more fair. so for instance, let's say i magically had juan soto this year for $2. now that the season is over, his salary went up to $4 automatically. and since he's really low-salary, many of the other hypothetical owners assigned arbitration dollars to him, so now he's up to $23. that would be a big bump in this example. but he produces maybe $60 or $70 worth of production, so he'd still be dirt cheap in this wonderful fever dream. there are other wrinkles like, if i cut a player midseason, he still counts 50% against my salary cap until someone else picks him up. so, if ou like your fantasy baseball to stimulate your brain and force you to think it out, you'd probably enjoy it. one thing that i really do like, is that it doesn't really reward you for being fast. for instance, in most leagues, players are free agents until someone snaps them up. first come, first served. sucks if you wake up late after some rookie nobody comes in and no-hits the mets. he'd be snapped up before your alarm clock even thinks about beeping. on ottoneu, if someone wanted to add him, they would start an auction for him. and every owner would have 2 days to put in a blind bid for his services. highest bidder gets him. so its as much (perhaps more) about managing your payroll than it is knowing obscure players. its also on fangraphs, so there's plenty of resources available to dive deeper on your players. the time commitment isn't necessarily terrrible, except for the draft. the draft takes a loooong time, especially when there are new teams filling empty rosters. but the longer you stay in it, the better the values get. the initial league draft took two days. not 48 hours, but several hours over two nights. last year was maybe 3 hours, i think...? not sure. but after that, you can probably get by with a few minutes a day to set your lineups, check for injuries and starting pitchers, see how you're doing, maybe peruse the free agent list, and move along. oh yeah. one nice thing about it is that since the rate stats are so important for pitchers, and because you're on the hook for players you drop, there's really no such thing as streaming, which can get real annoying in a LOT of other leagues without transaction limits. so.. if that all sounds terrible, well, sorry! but it sounds like an interesting challenge, please, sign up. we need more mets fans!