Excluding the gold bordered World Championship deck copies which are not legal anywhere.If any cards can be distinguished from the other cards in the deck without viewing its front face, then those cards are marked and not legal for tournament play. Also, altered cards may be thicker than the other cards in the deck, depending on the method used to alter the card. Significantly creased cards can be distinguished from other cards in a deck, even sleeved. From the Magic Tournament Rules section 3.3 on Authorized Cards: Using opaque backed sleeves can get around this problem. Using older lands is fine by all these rules so far, but if the cards can be identified in your deck because of their age, they count as marked and would be illegal for tournament play. Wastes, the colorless basic land, are not currently standard legal since Oath of the Gatewatch rotated out in September 2017. The Snow-Covered versions are currently legal until Kaldheim rotates out in September 2022. This applies to the regular 5 basic lands. The five basic lands, Plains, Island, Swamp, Mountain, and Forest, have been printed in almost 2 every set, and this means that since there has always been a set in Standard containing a copy of these lands, all copies of these lands are legal to play in Standard. This is determined based on the English name for that card (regardless of the language it's printed in) from the Comprehensive Rules:Ģ01.2 A card’s name is always considered to be the English version of its name, regardless of printed language. For example, it is okay to use the Stronghold printing of Mana Leak in Modern even though Stronghold is not a legal set for use in Modern. The cards being played in the deck must be printed in a set that is legal in the format, even if the printing being used is from an otherwise illegal set. The second round will be scheduled on TBD. From the Magic Tournament Rules section 3.3 on Authorized Cards: Formats are Sealed Deck with Top 8 draft, Standard, Modern, and Pioneer. ![]() All copies 1 of a card are legal in standard if a copy is in any standard legal set. Magic has made three types of sets since Alpha. After the 1993 release of Limited Edition, also known as Alpha and Beta, roughly 3-4 major sets have been released per year, in addition to various spin-off products. Lands follow the same rules as every other card in Magic, this includes basic lands. The trading card game Magic: The Gathering has released a large number of sets since it was first published by Wizards of the Coast. Yes, unless they stop being printed in new sets
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