Promotional cards or promos are Magic cards that are not normally found in regular sets. They can be obtained through giveaways, redemption programs, or other such non-traditional sources. The following is a list of various promotional cards:
Alternate art lands[ | ]
APAC lands[ | ]
APAC (Asia-Pacific) lands are alternate art basic lands that were available to people living in the Asia-Pacific region. The cards were available in three packs: red, blue, and clear. These packs were given to purchasers of boxes of Tempest boosters. The artwork features scenes from around the Asia-Pacific region.[1][2][3]
Euro lands[ | ]
Euro lands are alternate art lands that were available to people living in Europe. Their artwork features scenes from around this region. The cards were available in three packs: blue, red, and purple. These packs were given to European purchasers of boxes of Nemesis, Prophecy, and Invasion boosters. The bar code of a booster box had to be cut out and mailed to the appropriate Magic distributor in each country to receive one land booster.
Guru lands[ | ]
The Guru program was initiated by Wizards to promote Magic more effectively. For every 10 Guru points, the Guru received one randomly chosen Guru land and one booster of the latest expert-level Magic set. Wizards of the Coast kept a record of which lands had been rewarded to ensure that after 50 Guru points each Guru had a complete set of Guru lands.
Each of the Guru lands was illustrated by Terese Nielsen. The lands show five stages of a "double eclipse."[4]
The Guru program was discontinued on February 27, 2001. Since then, the Guru lands are now quite collectible, with the most valuable, Island, being worth over $400 as of February 2017.
Guru lands have the set symbol ().
MPS lands[ | ]
The Magic Premiere Shop program, or MPS, was a promotional program to promote and encourage increased play in the Japanese Magic community.[5] It debuted in 2006 with Ravnica-themed, foil basic lands displaying the names and symbols of the guilds. Later MPS promos featured setting-specific alternate art basic lands themed to the plane of that year's expansion.[6][7] This program was discontinued as of April 30, 2012.
Judge Promo Lands[ | ]
In August 2014, a cycle of foil full-art basic lands illustrated by Terese Nielsen was announced.[8] According to the letter included with them, they were intended to settle a dispute between Wizards of the Coast and the Judge community.
Standard Series promos[ | ]
Between February 13 and April 16, 2017, shops could run a series of fun Standard. If a player participated in six events during this window of time, they received a special Battle land promo card. Prairie Stream, Sunken Hollow, Smoldering Marsh, Cinder Glade, and Canopy Vista, using normal card frame but Masterpiece Series art.[9]
Celebration cards[ | ]
Richard Garfield cards[ | ]
Richard Garfield created a card called Proposal for his marriage proposal to Lily Wu. There are nine copies of this card in existence. He later created a card to celebrate each of the births of his children (Splendid Genesis and Fraternal Exaltation). For his second marriage, he created Phoenix Heart.
Wizards of the Coast Cards[ | ]
1996 World Champion[ | ]
- See also 1996 World Championship deck.
The unique card 1996 World Champion was given to Tom Chanpheng of Australia for winning the 1996 World Championships. The card is encased in lucite, apparently floating above a silver globe. In 2001 it was sold to a private collector. One sheet of this card was printed, but all other copies including printing plates were ceremonially destroyed.[10] Videotapes of the destruction were shown at the Championship. Rumor has it that artist proofs of this card exist. The card doesn't work in the rules.[11][12]
Shichifukujin Dragon[ | ]
The unique card Shichifukujin Dragon was created to celebrate the opening of the Japan DCI Tournament Center in Tokyo, Japan.[10][13] All copies except for one were destroyed. The remaining Shichifukujin Dragon has been encased at the Tournament Center for public view together with the original artwork of the card. The Tournament Center was closed on February 28, 2003, and the card was moved to the Hobby Japan Head Office where it currently resides. Shichifukujin is the name of the Seven Deities of Good Fortune of Japanese mythology.[14]
Like 1996 World Champion and the Garfield cards, this is not an official card but a special one-off creation.[15]
Actors Special Guest Gift Cards[ | ]
Actors Special Guest Gift Cards were created for actors Evan Goldberg, Seth Rogen, Joseph Gordon-Levitt and sent to their managers in advance of the Hollywood Pro Tour that took place on May 23-25, 2008 in hopes of enticing the actors to attend the event.[16] At least fifteen to twenty copies of each card are believed to exist, with extra copies distributed to Wizards of the Coast employees.
Robot Chicken[ | ]
Robot Chicken was a celebration of a collaboration between Wizards of the Coast and Robot Chicken distributed after Pro Tour San Diego on February 19-21, 2010. Five copies of this card exist, and are not legal in tournament play.
Post the Enchanter[ | ]
Post the Enchanter is a celebration of Post Malone's collaboration with Magic, and is a skinned borderless version of Zur the Enchanter featured in the Post Malone Secret Lair Drop. There is only one of this card in existence, and it was graded 8 (Near Mint - Mint) by PSA.
Magic's 30th Anniversary[ | ]
To celebrate Magic: The Gathering's 30th anniversary, Wizards of the Coast released 30 promos across eight Magic Prereleases, one for each year of Magic's history.
As part of the birthday week, a special foil-etched Lotus Petal was given to attendee's of Magic's events at Gen Con Indiana.[17] The promo will be given away to the general public through WPN stores from September 22, 2023 in tandem with MagicCon Las Vegas.[18]
Employee retirement cards[ | ]
Luc Mertens[ | ]
When Luc Mertens, Magic's liaison at Carta Mundi, retired on September 1, 2013 after 33 years, he was given fifteen to twenty promotional cards celebrating his life and work.[19]
Deborah Thomas[ | ]
When Deborah Thomas, CFO of Hasbro retired in 2022 she was given at least one promotion card made in her image as a Planeswalker.[20]
Premium Event cards[ | ]
Dragon Con[ | ]
Dragon Con is a famous convention in Atlanta, Georgia, USA for fans of fantasy, science-fiction, and horror genres. In July 1994, visitors were given a postcard voucher that could be mailed in and redeemed for a Nalathni Dragon promotional card. The card was sent in October 1994, along with a certificate of authenticity. Originally, the card was announced with a print run of 10,000 and was supposed to be available exclusively for attendants of the convention, but due to complaints about the limited availability and to stem price gouging, the print run was increased, and the card was additionally distributed in issue #3 of The Duelist magazine and issue #4 of The Duelist Companion magazine. There also exists a Japanese version that has been distributed in one of the Wizards of the Coast redemption programs. As a result of the Dragon Con card controversy, Wizards of the Coast stopped releasing functionally unique promotional cards.
Grand Prix cards[ | ]
The Magic: The Gathering Grand Prix tournament series is an international circuit of large-scale qualifier tournaments featuring $30,000 in cash prizes, invitations to the Pro Tour for the top 16 finishers, and exclusive foil promo cards for participants. Starting in 2007 a promotional card was given to all visitors of any Grand Prix in that year's cycle upon presentation of their DCI number.
- Grand Prix 2007 — Spiritmonger
- Grand Prix 2008 — Call of the Herd and Crystalline Sliver[21]
- Grand Prix 2009 — Chrome Mox[22]
- Grand Prix 2010 — Umezawa's Jitte
- Grand Prix 2011 — Maelstrom Pulse
- Grand Prix 2012-a — Goblin Guide
- Grand Prix 2012-b — Lotus Cobra
- Grand Prix 2013-a — Primeval Titan (Given out to 2013 GP competitors through Grand Prix Houston, June 15–16)
- Grand Prix 2013-b — All Is Dust (Given out to 2013 GP competitors starting with Grand Prix Las Vegas, June 22–23)[23]
- Grand Prix 2014 — Batterskull
- Grand Prix 2015 — Griselbrand
- Grand Prix 2016 — Stoneforge Mystic[24] and Sword of Feast and Famine (unreleased)
- Grand Prix 2017 — Progenitus[25]
- Grand Prix 2018 — Mutavault[26]
- Players received one foil promo land card when participating in select side events. Featuring the art of Donato Giancola, the Grand Prix Foil Promo Lands were available exclusively at Magic Grand Prix Events.[27]
MagicFest cards[ | ]
- MagicFest 2019 — textless Lightning Bolt
- 5 foil promo basic lands with art by Sam Burley.
- MagicFest 2020 — textless Path to Exile
- 5 foil promo basic lands with art by Jonas de Ro.
- MagicFest 2023 — textless Reliquary Tower
- Festival 2024 — textless Counterspell
Pro Tour cards[ | ]
Given to all visitors of any Pro Tour in that year's cycle upon presentation of their DCI number.
- Pro Tour 2007 — Eternal Dragon
- Pro Tour 2008 — Mirari's Wake
- Pro Tour 2009 — Treva, the Renewer[22]
- Pro Tour 2010 — Avatar of Woe[28]
- Pro Tour 2011 — Ajani Goldmane
2023 and later: Secret Lair/Promos and prizes
Play promos[ | ]
Qualifier cards[ | ]
Worlds cards[ | ]
- Side events participation bonus at 1999 World Championships in Yokohama — Balduvian Horde
Convention cards[ | ]
Given out at conventions, these promotional cards were regular-art, foil cards with the flavor text replaced by the address for the official Magic website. These included:
- 2009 — Steward of Valeron
- 2010 — Kor Skyfisher
- 2011 — Bloodthrone Vampire[29]
- 2012 — Merfolk Mesmerist
- 2013 — Chandra's Fury
- 2014 — Stealer of Secrets
- 2015 — Aeronaut Tinkerer
A new series, featuring foil alternate art, was started in 2018. These are marked Convention in the information below the text box.
- 2018 — Japanese Serra Angel (Dominaria)
- 2018 — full-art Death Baron (Core Set 2019)[30]
- 2019 — full-art Deeproot Champion (Ixalan)[31]
- 2019 — full-art Nightpack Ambusher (Core Set 2020)[32]
- 2023 forwards, see
San Diego Comic-Con "black-on-black" cards[ | ]
HASCON cards[ | ]
Gen Con cards[ | ]
- 2024 — Lightning Bolt[33]
Commander cards[ | ]
A special Sol Ring Commander promo (foil and non-foil) with new art by Mark Tedin was released at Grand Prix Las Vegas, just before the release of Commander 2019.[34] It also became available at some other Commander events at MagicFests in 2019, as well as some other places in 2020.[35]
Lunar New Year cards[ | ]
To celebrate the 2018 Chinese New Year, Wizards of the Coast in Taiwan released special foil treasure tokens depicting the Chinese Myth of the Money Tree.[36]
In 2021, a standard sealed event was held in the APAC region between February 5th and March 31st to celebrate the beginning of the lunar Year the Ox.[37] Two promos were given out:
Additional promos to celebrate the Year of the Ox were given out at the APAC Store Challenger Series:[38][39]
- Moraug, Fury of Akoum (June 21-July 18, 2021)
- Ox of Agonas (August 9-September 5, 2021)
- Angrath, the Flame-Chained (October 11-November 7, 2021)
- Tahngarth, First Mate (December 6, 2021 - January 16, 2022)
Starting in 2022, cards celebrating the Lunar New Year of the Tiger were released in conjunction with the APAC League:
Tournament cards[ | ]
Arena League cards[ | ]
To increase the attractiveness of joining the Arena League, promotional cards were given out. In 1996, participants received one of five alternate art basic lands randomly at the beginning of each season. The best player of a season was additionally given an alternate art Disenchant, and the second best player was awarded an alternate art Fireball.
Starting with the Radiant 97 season, oversized cards replaced the alternate art cards, but the basics of the prize system did not change.
With the successful introduction of foil cards into the world of Magic, the prize structure was changed again after the Radiant 99 season. At the end of each season, the two top-ranked players and a randomly chosen player with at least 30 points were rewarded with a promotional foil card. Furthermore, every player who managed to collect 15 or more points during the season received one foil basic land. Points were awarded for winning (2 points) and losing (1 point) matches. Over the years, some of the land cards were reissued. This first era of promotional foil cards ended in disarray in 2002 when a cycle of foil Limited Edition basic lands was aborted midway, already released promo cards were reissued, and during the last season starting on October 14th. The Friday Night Magic promo cards Jackal Pup and Quirion Ranger were given out as prize cards instead of Arena League promo cards.
Starting in 2003, the Arena League introduced yet another prize schedule. Seasons were now synchronized with the release of new expert-level sets and could be held until the release of the next set. After each season, the 20 players with the most points were rewarded with a randomly chosen alternate art basic land out of a set of five issued for the whole year. Players with the 10 topmost scores were awarded an Arena League foil prize card changing with each season.
The Unhinged season was special because alternate art Unhinged cards were given out instead of basic lands[44] and because it partially overlapped with the Champions of Kamigawa season.
For unknown reasons, during the Guildpact season in 2006, two prize cards, Castigate and Wee Dragonauts were given out instead of one. The exact distribution of these cards was left to the tournament organizer.
Due to a sorting error, the promotional cards Pouncing Jaguar, Rewind, Skittering Skirge, Duress, and Karn, Silver Golem were additionally distributed in English Urza's Destiny booster packs in place of uncommon cards.
- See also Arena League promos.
Champs/States cards[ | ]
Friday Night Magic cards[ | ]
The Friday Night Magic program was created to offer a low-level DCI-sanctioned tournament environment. Every Friday in registered shops all over the world, small tournaments with at least eight people are held by the shop owners. Participants compete against each other in Standard Constructed, Sealed Deck, and Booster Draft formats. Three participants are given a special foil card which is rotated monthly: the winner of the tournament, the fairest player, and a random participant who has not been rewarded with a prize card already.
Starting with 2005, the prize system was slightly changed. Now four copies of the monthly prize card are given out, one to the top-ranking player, one to the second-best player, and two to random participants who have not been rewarded with a prize card already.
Unlike the other cards, the foil alternate art Disenchant was not supposed to be a Friday Night Magic promotional card. It had been printed in 2000, probably at that time supposed to be a future judge reward card like its cousin, the foil alternate art Counterspell. Due to internal conflicts between different departments of Wizards of the Coast, the card was never scheduled, though, and lay dormant for years. A few copies were leaked to the public at that time, fetching exorbitant prices. In 2003, the prize card for March, a foil Crystalline Sliver, was unexpectedly skipped, allegedly because it had been stolen.[21] As an intermediary solution, upcoming prize cards were moved up one month ahead of schedule, but since the new card layout was not supposed to debut before the release of Eighth Edition, the foil alternate art Disenchant was eventually released in July 2003 to fill the gap.
- See also FNM card.
Gateway cards[ | ]
The Gateway Organized Play program was a program by Wizards to send promotional cards to players for participating in tournaments at local stores. In October 2008 The Magic Gateway-program has come to an end and was replaced by a new program called the "Wizards Play Network".
- See also Gateway card.
Magic Player Rewards[ | ]
The Magic Player Rewards program was set up by Wizards of the Coast to promote play in DCI tournaments. Promotional cards were sent to eligible players based on the number of DCI-sanctioned tournaments they participated in.
- See also Magic Player Reward.
Prerelease cards[ | ]
Prerelease Tournaments are held before the release of a new Magic set in selected card stores all over the world. Participants play a Sealed Deck tournament, using cards from several booster packs from the new expansion plus a few boosters and a tournament pack from preceding expansions of the current expansion block. Winners of the tournament receive additional boosters and sometimes other Magic products at the discretion of the tournament organizer. In addition, since the release of Tempest, all participants are awarded a promotional prerelease card which is an altered version of a rare card from the new expansion set.
- See also Prerelease card.
Release/Launch Party cards[ | ]
Starting with Unhinged, a new series of Release Events was introduced in North and South America at the end of 2004. These events are held the weekend next to the street release date of new Magic sets. Like in prerelease tournaments, participants compete in a Sealed Deck environment, utilizing the new cards. A promotional version of a card from the card set is given out to the first 32 participants. In addition to that, additional booster packs and a life counter are rewarded to the top-ranking players. In other countries, the Release Event card is sometimes given out as a participation bonus at additional prerelease tournaments held the weekend after the global prerelease tournaments have taken place.
The Rukh Egg can be considered the first Release Event card, not only commemorating the release of the Eighth Edition card set but also commemorating the tenth anniversary of Magic itself. Consequently, all Eighth Edition release tournaments were named Global Celebration tournaments and were held in card stores around the world on the weekend before the official release of Eighth Edition.
To commemorate the release of Russian Magic cards, for the Ninth Edition Release Events in Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus, a Russian Shivan Dragon promotional card was given out to participants instead of the Force of Nature promo issued everywhere else.
- See also Release card.
Magic Game Day cards[ | ]
Store Championship cards[ | ]
Junior Super Series[ | ]
Japan Junior Tournament[ | ]
The Japan Junior Tournaments are the Japanese equivalent of the Junior Super Series in the U.S. There were weekly tournaments. In 2002, a premium Japanese language Volcanic Hammer was used as a participation prize for the weekly events.[45]
World Magic Cup Qualifier cards[ | ]
The World Magic Cup Qualifier (WMCQ) cards are participation prizes for competing in said tournaments.[46] They are foil and alternate art.
National Championships[ | ]
The National Championships cards are participation prizes for competing in said tournaments.[47] They are foil and alternate art.
World Championships[ | ]
The Worlds cards are prizes for Standard tournament World Championship Viewing Parties at WPN Premium stores. The first was released in 2020. They are foil and alternate art.[48]
Commander[ | ]
PWCS[ | ]
Promos that were given out at a Japan-only official player program.
Gift cards[ | ]
Happy Holidays cards[ | ]
Heroes of the Realm cards[ | ]
The Heroes of the Realm cards are black-bordered fun cards that have the "Heroes of the Realm" card back. They are custom cards handed out by the execs at Wizards of the Coast to some of their employers as a reward.
Judge Gift cards[ | ]
The Judge Gift cards were handed out or mailed to judges for judging at magic tournaments and events. All of the cards are foil.
Media inserts[ | ]
Armada comic book inserts[ | ]
The Shadow Mage is a four part mini-series comic book published in 1995 by Armada Comics, an imprint of Acclaim. The first two issues include special printings of Magic cards. These cards are identical to Fourth Edition cards but have a copyright date of 1994 rather than 1995, like regular Fourth Edition cards.
- The Shadow Mage #1 Comic — Fireball
- The Shadow Mage #2 Comic — Blue Elemental Blast
Dakkon Blackblade is a single-issue comic published in 1996 by Armada. The issue included the card Dakkon Blackblade from Chronicles.
- The Dakkon Blackblade #1 Comic — Dakkon Blackblade
The Legend of Jedit Ojanen is a two-part mini-series comic book published in 1996 by Armada. The first issue included the card Johan from Chronicles.
- The Legend of Jedit Ojanen #1 Comic — Johan
Serra Angel is a single-issue comic published in 1996 by Armada. The issue included an oversized 6"x9" Serra Angel with alternative artwork by Rebecca Guay.[49]
- The Serra Angel #1 Comic — Serra Angel
Ice Age is a four-part mini-series comic book published in 1996 by Armada Comics. The first issues included the cards Chub Toad and Bone Shaman from Ice Age.
- Ice Age #1 Comic — Chub Toad
- Ice Age #2 Comic — Bone Shaman
Homelands is a single-issue comic published in 1996 by Armada. It included one of three cards from Homelands.
- Homelands Comic — either Apocalypse Chime, Baron Sengir or Feroz's Ban
The CardZ inserts[ | ]
The Cardz is a trading card magazine published in Thailand. Twice already they have published a promotional card for Magic the Gathering. Both cards have a gold foil stamp of the magazine logo but otherwise, look like regular English Magic cards. Note that there are counterfeits of these cards on the market. Compare the Cardz font of known originals with potential purchases. Also, compare the font to the logo of the magazine.
- The CardZ #1.0 Magazine — Planeshift Silver Drake
- The CardZ #5.0 Magazine — Apocalypse Phyrexian Rager
Coro Coro comic book inserts[ | ]
Coro Coro is a comic book published in Japan. It is famous for its fair number of Pokémon promotional cards included.
- Coro Coro #281 comic — Japanese 7th Edition Shivan Dragon
- Coro Coro G #Winter Issue comic — Japanese Scars of Mirrodin Darksteel Juggernaut
Coro Coro Aniki magazine inserts[ | ]
A Japanese manga magazine created by Shogakukan, which is published quarterly. Sister magazine to Coro Coro.
- CoroCoro Aniki magazine spring 2019 — Japanese Alternate Art Cast Down
Dengeki-Maoh magazine and comic inserts[ | ]
On February 27, 2010, the Japanese Magazine "Dengeki-Maoh" started the Magic Manga comic "Magic: the Gathering Eternal Blaze" based on the Planeswalker novel The Purifying Fire. Also, Japanese Duel Decks: Jace vs. Chandra included alternate art cards as a tie-in for the comic. Yoshino Himori is the artist.
- Dengeki-Maoh #1 magazine — Japanese Worldwake Cunning Sparkmage
- Dengeki-Maoh #5 magazine — Japanese Magic 2011 Chandra's Outrage
- Dengeki-Maoh #8 magazine — Japanese Magic 2011 Chandra's Spitfire
- Comic #1 — Japanese Scars of Mirrodin Kuldotha Phoenix
- Comic #2 — Japanese Magic 2012 Phantasmal Dragon
- Japanese Duel Decks: Jace vs. Chandra — Chandra Nalaar
- Japanese Duel Decks: Jace vs. Chandra — Jace Beleren
"Destroy All Humans. They Can't Be Regenerated" comic inserts[ | ]
The Japanese manga すべての人類を破壊する。それらは再生できない ("Destroy All Humankind. They Can't Be Regenerated") takes place in 1998 (during the Urza block). The characters play the game, mention specific cards and archetypes of the time (e.g. Turbo Genius) and also play different game types (draft, type II, and so on). The manga volumes each come with a Japanese Language foil promo of a card from that era. As of October 2024, the series was released in English under the name Destroy All Humans. They Can’t Be Regenerated. These also contained the promo cards with English text, in the M15 card frame.[50]
Volume | Japanese | English |
---|---|---|
1 | Diabolic Edict | Diabolic Edict |
2 | Shock | |
3 | Duress | |
4 | Voltaic Key | |
5 | Dark Ritual | |
6 | Crop Rotation | |
7 | Counterspell | |
8 | Bone Shredder | |
9 | Disenchant | |
10 | Wild Growth | |
11 | Frantic Search | |
12 | Worn Powerstone | |
13 | Avalanche Riders | |
14 | Culling the Weak | |
15 | Snuff Out |
The Duelist inserts[ | ]
The Duelist was the first official Wizards of the Coast magazine released in the Fall of 1993 and soon evolved into a comprehensive source of information for all Wizards of the Coast products and related topics. Starting as a highly artistic magazine, over time it lost some of its aesthetic appeal. Due to the increasing popularity of the internet and its inherent advantages, The Duelist was discontinued after 41 issues in September 1999.
The card Nalathni Dragon was supposed to be available exclusively for attendants of the Dragon Con convention, but due to complaints about the limited availability and to stem price gouging, the print run was increased, and the card was additionally distributed in issue #3 of The Duelist magazine and issue #4 of The Duelist Companion magazine.
The alternate art version of Scent of Cinder from Urza's Destiny, illustrated by Carl Critchlow, was created to be a giveaway in the Duelist magazine. The card was included in every issue of Duelist #39, which was released in July 1999. This alternate version was given a collector number of "96a/143."[51]
- Duelist #3 Magazine — Nalathni Dragon
- Duelist #39 Magazine — Urza's Destiny Scent of Cinder alternate art
Gotta magazine inserts[ | ]
Gotta is a Japanese magazine aimed to cover all sorts of free-time activities of younger people, like comics, sports, and games. It debuted in December 1999 with a special introductory issue, with regular issues starting in January 2000. The magazine series has published four promotional Magic cards over time, one of them featuring alternate art. The cards are white-bordered and have a special backside.
- Gotta #1 magazine — Japanese Sixth Edition Archangel Alternate Art and Japanese Urza's Destiny Thorn Elemental
- Gotta #? magazine — Japanese Nemesis Ascendant Evincar
- Gotta #? magazine — Japanese Nemesis Parallax Dementia
HarperPrism book coupon redemption[ | ]
HarperPrism, an imprint of Harper Collins, published ten Magic: The Gathering novels, starting with the first named Arena in September 1994. The first five of them had a coupon on the last page which could be sent to Harper Prism to get a free card.[52] While in the first four novels, the rewarded card (or in the case of Arena, two cards) was fixed, HarperPrism used the fifth novel to distribute the remaining cards randomly while supply lasted. The cards were available in English, Italian, French, Portuguese, and Spanish, with the Spanish set erroneously printed with white borders. The books were also available in German but were not distributed by HarperPrism and therefore have no cards associated with them. The Italian book cycle was discontinued after the second novel due to poor sales.
Book Title | Promo Card(s) |
---|---|
Arena | Arena or Sewers of Estark |
Whispering Woods | Windseeker Centaur |
Shattered Chains | Giant Badger |
Final Sacrifice | Mana Crypt |
The Cursed Land | One random from above |
In a 2004 April Fool's joke, MagicTheGathering.com author Mark Gottlieb wrote Peeking in the Black Box, where he described a fictional sixth HarperPrism card, 'Curse of Nazir', given out with The Cursed Land.[53]
Wizards of the Coast Novel[ | ]
When the novel Agents of Artifice was ordered from a WotC store with a number online, it came with a very short-printed Jace Beleren card. Because the special offer lasted only for a short while, the quantity of this card was very small and was distributed quickly. You can still obtain the book through any bookstore, but the promotional offer has ended.
- The Agent of Artifice — Jace Beleren (alternate art)
Kartefakt inserts[ | ]
Kartefakt is the most popular German trading card magazine. After three prerelease issues, its first regular issue debuted in July 1995, and the magazine has been released bimonthly thereafter. During all the years it has managed to outlive all other trading card magazines in Germany. Aside from the main Kartefakt series, two Special issues have been published which both focus on Magic.
The Jamuraan Lion from Visions is unique in its way that all non-English versions, including the German one, have a differently cropped image compared to the English version.[54]
- Kartefakt #8 magazine — German Visions Jamuraan Lion.
Player's guide inserts[ | ]
The Official Player's Guide to Mercadian Masques is the first of a series of player's guides for every new expert level set. It was available as part of the Mercadian Masques Fat Pack, which is the first Fat Pack in existence, and for subscribers of The Duelist magazine. Unofficially, this guide is referred to as The Duelist issue #42. Player's Guides from Nemesis to Invasion were also available in different issues of the TopDeck magazine.
- Official Player's Guide to Mercadian Masques addition — Mercadian Masques Warmonger
RPG Magazine inserts[ | ]
RPG Magazine was published by Hobby Japan Co. Prerelease cards were added in a sealed pack inside the magazine with a different flavor text or different font style.
- Issue #79 — Mirage Sandbar Crocodile and Zhalfirin Knight
- Issue #82 — Visions Shrieking Drake and Talruum Champion
- Issue #85 — Fifth Edition Stream of Life
TopDeck inserts[ | ]
In December 1999, Wizards of the Coast published a magazine named TopDeck. It was dedicated to trading card games, while other Wizards of the Coast magazines covered other parts of their product line. However, due to the increasing popularity of the internet and its inherent advantages, TopDeck ceased production in February 2001 with issue #15.
Issue #14 featured a Starter 2000 Sampler pack which included nine standard Sixth Edition cards and a Spined Wurm without expansion symbol.
Some issues of the TopDeck magazine included a player's guide for specific Magic sets.
- TopDeck #2 Magazine — Mercadian Masques Lightning Hounds
IDW Comics[ | ]
IDW comics teamed up with Wizards of the Coast to create a 4-comic book series based on the storyline. It introduced a new planeswalker, Dack Fayden, who was involved in the Innistrad storyline. Each of these comic books contained a playable alternate-art promo card. The first wave of each comic would contain the card while the second wave would not - these cards were short-printed. The cards are legal in the format that they are printed in.
- Issue #1 (2/1/12) — Alternate-Art Treasure Hunt (IDW Publishing)[55][56]
- Issue #2 (2/29/12) — Alternate-Art Faithless Looting (IDW Publishing)[57]
- Issue #3 (3/28/12) — Alternate-Art Feast of Blood (IDW Publishing)[58]
- Issue #4 (5/23/12) — Alternate-Art Electrolyze (IDW Publishing)[58]
A second volume of 4 comics called The Spell Thief picked up where the last mini-series left off. All 4 of the first wave of these issues were also packaged with alternate art promo cards.
- The Spell Thief #1 (6/27/12) — Alternate-Art Arrest (IDW Publishing)
- The Spell Thief #2 (8/8/12) — Alternate-Art Consume Spirit (IDW Publishing)
- The Spell Thief #3 (9/19/12) — Alternate-Art Standstill (IDW Publishing)
- The Spell Thief #4 (11/7/12) — Alternate-Art Breath of Malfegor (IDW Publishing)
A third volume of 4 comics called Path of Vengeance followed up on The Spell Thief series. All 4 of the first wave of these issues were also packaged with alternate art promo cards.
- Path of Vengeance #1 (12/5/12) — Alternate-Art Turnabout (IDW Publishing)
- Path of Vengeance #2 (12/19/12) — Alternate-Art Voidmage Husher (IDW Publishing)
- Path of Vengeance #3 (1/30/13) — Alternate-Art Ogre Arsonist (IDW Publishing)[59]
- Path of Vengeance #4 (2/27/13) — Alternate-Art Corrupt (IDW Publishing)
Volume 4, called Theros, is comprised of 5 comics packaged with alternate art promo cards.
- Theros #1 (10/9/13) — Alternate-Art High Tide (IDW Publishing)
- Theros #2 (12/11/13) — Alternate-Art Wash Out (IDW Publishing)
- Theros #3 (1/15/14) — Alternate-Art Gaze of Granite (IDW Publishing)
- Theros #4 (1/22/14) — Alternate-Art Acquire (IDW Publishing)
- Theros #5 (3/19/14) — Alternate-Art Duress (IDW Publishing)
Membership incentives[ | ]
DCI legend membership promos[ | ]
The DCI, the Duelists' Convocation International, is an organization that administers the whole tournament structure of Wizards of the Coast games. Founded in September 1993, the DCI, at that time named Duelists' Convocation, offered two different membership levels: The free Mana membership and the $30 US Legend membership. While the Mana membership was sufficient to participate in DCI-sanctioned tournaments, the Legend membership provided some additional items:[60]
- One alternate art Counterspell (DCI)
- One alternate art Incinerate (DCI)
Oversized cards[ | ]
6x9 cards[ | ]
Most of the 6" x 9" / 15 x 23 cm cards were distributed in the Arena League between 1997 and 1999.[61] Changing with every Arena League season, they were awarded for the best four placements for each season and as a special prize chosen by the organizers of each season. Additionally, some cards were given out as a participation bonus. Participation cards were given out at the beginning of each season, and prize cards at the end of each season. As before, player rankings were determined by a complex point system similar to the DCI ranking and match reports had to be sent to Wizards of the Coast by every store where they were analyzed and player ranks were calculated. This system was replaced with a much simpler system beginning in 1999. Along with the renaming of the Arena League into Arena Outpost League, players received 2 points for winning a match and 1 point for losing a match. Points were now organized by each store separately.
Due to a continually decreasing popularity, oversized cards were discontinued after the Radiant 1999 season.
9x12 cards[ | ]
These cards measure about 9" x 12" / 23 x 32 cm. They were used to advertise Magic in general and different Magic sets in specific. They feature holes that facilitate hanging them up.
- Sixth Edition — Raging Goblin
- Nemesis — Ascendant Evincar
- Nemesis — Rhox
Box-topper cards[ | ]
To commemorate the tenth anniversary of Magic, Wizards of the Coast decided to add to Eighth Edition one card of every set which had never been reprinted before, including the HarperPrism book promos, but excluding Unglued. Except for the cards originating from Starter and the reprinted HarperPrism promo card Giant Badger, these cards were also produced in an oversized version, measuring about 4" x 6" (11 x 15 cm). One random card was added to each box of Eighth Edition boosters which gave them their name "box topper" cards. Six of them were used as giveaways at shows and conventions over the summer of 2003. Ninth Edition also had Box Topper cards but not as many as Eighth Edition.
- See also Box-topper.
Vanguard[ | ]
Vanguard cards are oversized character cards, measuring about 3.5" × 5" / 9 x 12.5 cm which are set aside at the beginning of the game. They modify the maximum hand size and the starting life point total and grant additional abilities throughout the game.
Planechase[ | ]
Planechase is a series that contains Plane cards that are 3.5" x 5" / 9 x 12.5 cm. These planes modify the field and affect everyone. During the release of the series along with some tournaments, some DCI promos are involved with this series. These are mostly used for multiplayer games but can be used for one-on-one. Planechase 2012 launches June 1, 2012, and at least one promo will come with that release and probably more thereafter for WPN.
- Promo #1 - DCI 41 Tazeem (release events)
- Promo #2 - DCI 42 Celestine Reef
- Promo #3 - DCI 43 Horizon Boughs
- Promo #4 - DCI 44 Mirrored Depths
- Promo #5 - DCI 45 Tember City
- Promo #6 - DCI 46 Stairs to Infinity (release events)
Archenemy[ | ]
The Archenemy is a multiplayer game where everyone (at least 2 players) is teamed up to go against 1 player, who is the Archenemy. Because there will be more players against you, 3 " x 5 " / 9 x 12.5 cm Scheme cards are built to make it fair for you to help make the power balanced for both sides. These schemes are highly not recommended for one-on-one. Like Planechase, there are DCI promos that were released that are involved with this series.
- Promo #1 - DCI 54 Plots that Span Centuries[62]
- Promo #2 - DCI 55 Perhaps You've Met My Cohort
- Promo #3 - DCI 56 Your Inescapable Doom
- Promo #4 - DCI 57 Drench the Soil in their Blood
- Promo #5 - DCI 58 Imprison this Insolent Wretch
Helvault[ | ]
The Helvault was a promotional box for the Avacyn Restored Prerelease events. It was shaped after the Helvault, a large rock of moonsilver that played an important role in the storyline. The Helvault included oversized cards of the five legendary mythic creatures in Avacyn Restored, being Griselbrand; Avacyn, Angel of Hope; Sigarda, Host of Herons; Gisela, Blade of Goldnight; and Bruna, Light of Alabaster, as well as a double-sided Angel/Demon token and gray Avacyn Restored spindown dice. Helvaults contained 54 oversized legend cards, 108 double-sided tokens, and 54 spindown dice.
A small percentage (likely 1% or less) of the Helvaults contained premium foil versions of all the cards within. These special versions also contained a random previously-released promotional card. These cards were chosen for having to do with angels, demons, or holy matters, with Serra Avenger, Demonic Tutor, and Wrath of God being among the included promos.
Commander[ | ]
In both the Commander and the Commander 2013 releases, three 3.5" x 5" / 9 x 12.5 cm oversized cards were included per deck. In the Commander 2014 release, only the Planeswalker card was printed as an oversized version, and the two other oversized cards were replaced by tokens to supplement each deck. Each of these oversized cards can be used in Commander games as the commander, to designate their special status.[63][64] All later Commander products contained similar oversized cards for the main Commander until they were replaced by display commander cards for Commander 2021.[65]
Special purpose reprints[ | ]
Hobby Japan commemorative cards[ | ]
In July 2002 Magic the Gathering had its sixth anniversary in Japan. To commemorate the event, Hobby Japan, the local Magic distributor in Japan and organizer of the Japanese tournament environment, published five cards selected from the Ice Age block which were not otherwise available in Japanese because the first expansion printed in Japanese was Mirage. They were distributed via a mail-in program until 30 September 2002. Nine bar codes of Japanese 7th Edition, Odyssey or Torment boosters had to be cut out and sent in to receive one randomly selected present card. These cards were:[66]
Redemption program cards[ | ]
The Redemption Program is created by Wizards of the Coast to appease customers in the case of major product flaw occurs. This program has been invoked six times:
- Due to a sorting error in June 1994, before packaging, all uncommon Legends cards were divided into two groups. As a result, whole booster boxes were filled with duplicates of only one group of uncommon cards. In response, Wizards of the Coast published a list of all affected cards in The Duelist magazine issue #2 and offered to replace sent-in cards from one group with the same amount of cards from the other group, chosen by the customer. No more than two copies of a card could be sent in, and the offer was limited to 100 cards per person.
- Caused by a printing error in October 1996, the Japanese Mirage set was missing the card Flood Plain. In its place, an extra Crystal Vein was printed. Wizards of the Coast offered a replacement: For two sent-in Japanese Crystal Veins, the customer received one Japanese Crystal Vein and a Japanese Flood Plain. Additionally, a Japanese Nalathni Dragon was added as a bonus card.
- In a similar case in September 1999, the Spanish Mercadian Masques set was missing the card Eye of Ramos. In its place an additional Worry Beads card was printed. As a method of redemption, Wizards of the Coast offered to replace sent-in Spanish Worry Beads with Spanish Eye of Ramos cards.
- Because of the high quantity of banned cards in the Standard tournament environment during the Tempest and Urza's block area, in April 1998 Wizards of the Coast activated their Redemption Program for the fourth time. Customers could send in all banned rare cards of both expert level blocks, in specific Earthcraft, Dream Halls, Mind over Matter, Recurring Nightmare, Fluctuator, Time Spiral, Tolarian Academy, and Memory Jar, and received one booster pack of the same set the banned card originated from per card.
- When the Legions Elvish Rage Preconstructed Deck came out, in place of Taunting Elf was Snarling Undorak, which was rather unusual having a Beast card in an Elvish theme deck. Wizards of the Coast apologized about that and said that if you send Snarling Undorak with a receipt of the deck you bought, they would send you two free Taunting Elf.
- After the Coldsnap Theme Decks arrived on the shelves, the Kjeldoran Cunning deck did not have all three Brainstorm cards in their deck and instead had one Essence Flare (which is also printed in the Snowscape theme deck). Due to that issue, Wizards of the Coast allowed you to send in those cards with a receipt of the deck you bought and they will send you a coupon for a discount when they restocked that deck with the correct cards.
Wizards of the Coast online store cards[ | ]
On May 16, 1997, Wizards of the Coast opened an online store that allowed customers to buy their products directly over the Internet To promote sales and to win customers for the online store, a temporary reward program was initialized in 1999. For each purchased Mercadian Masques booster box, the buyer was presented a Serra Angel foil card while supplies lasted.
In July 2002, Wizards of the Coast decided to outsource their online shop to Sean Vanderdasson, former Wizards of the Coast employee and owner of the online store SVGames.
Movie cards[ | ]
The 2010 Disney movie The Sorcerer's Apprentice had a Magic tie-in. Instead of just mocking up regular cards, Magic R&D was called upon to make new cards for Drake Stone's appearance. They even made him a Planeswalker.[67][68] These cards were never released.
Collaboration cards[ | ]
Several reprints gained new art and were distributed as part of a collaboration with third parties:
- Diabolic Tutor — Brain Dead apparel.
- Winged Boots — Stance socks (2023).[69]
Purchase promos[ | ]
Buy-a-Box cards[ | ]
To encourage booster box sales, certain local stores gave foil alternate-art cards to the first 20 customers to buy booster boxes of new sets. The cards have all five mana symbols arranged in a circle in the background of the text.
Bring-a-Friend[ | ]
Starting in 2020, any time a player brought someone new into the store to play in an event, the existing player was rewarded with the Bring-A-Friend promo, and the new player received a Welcome Booster.[70]
- 2020 — Reliquary Tower. This card was repurposed as a "Love Your LGS" gift after the reopening of stores in the wake of the 2019–20 coronavirus pandemic. This was given away with the purchase of any product ("Buy-Any-Magic").[71][72]
- 2021 — Mind Stone.[73]
- 2022/2023 — Thought Vessel
- 2023 — Cultivate
Love your LGS[ | ]
- 2021 — retro frame Fabled Passage for a purchase of $50 USD or greater of sealed Magic product.[74]
- Five more retro frame promos for US event entries.[75] These also come with an MTG Arena code for a Japanese Alt-Art Planeswalker sleeve.[76]
- 2022 — retro frame Sol Ring for a purchase of $50 USD or greater of sealed Magic product.[77]
- 2024 — Textless Sakura-Tribe Elder for purchasing three Modern Horizons 3 Play Boosters or Draft Event.[78]
Riceball promos[ | ]
Three alternate art Orb of Dragonkind versions, featuring "Onigiri"-style characters by illustrator Kawasumi were released as Buy-a-Box promos in Japan only for the release of Dungeons & Dragons: Adventures in the Forgotten Realms.[79]
- Orb of Dragonkind (J1)
- Orb of Dragonkind (J2)
- Orb of Dragonkind (J3)
Duels of the Planeswalkers[ | ]
Players who purchase the Duels of the Planeswalkers video game for Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, or PC are rewarded with a voucher to receive a special promo card to be picked up at their local shop (while supplies last). The first game was released on June 17, 2009, for Xbox 360, June 15, 2010, for PC, and November 23, 2010, for PlayStation 3. The second (DotP 2012) was released on June 15, 2011, on all three of the aforementioned platforms. DotP 2013 was released on June 20, 2012, while DotP 2014 was released on June 26, 2013, now featuring support for Apple and Android devices. PC releases could be purchased and downloaded through Steam, Xbox releases through the Xbox Games Store, PlayStation releases through the PlayStation Store, Android releases through the Google Play Store, and Apple releases through the App Store.
DotP 2009
- Xbox 360 — Garruk Wildspeaker (Duels of the Planeswalkers) (foil alternate art)
- PC — Nissa Revane (Duels of the Planeswalkers) (foil)[80]
- PlayStation 3 — Liliana Vess (Duels of the Planeswalkers) (foil alternate art)
DotP 2012
- PC — Frost Titan (Duels of the Planeswalkers) (foil alternate art)[81]
- Xbox 360 — Grave Titan (Duels of the Planeswalkers) (foil alternate art)
- PlayStation 3 — Inferno Titan (Duels of the Planeswalkers) (foil alternate art)
DotP 2013
- PC, iPad — Serra Avatar (Duels of the Planeswalkers)
- PlayStation 3 — Vampire Nocturnus (Duels of the Planeswalkers)
- Xbox 360 — Primordial Hydra (Duels of the Planeswalkers)
DotP 2014
- PC, iPad, Android — Scavenging Ooze (Duels of the Planeswalkers) (foil)
- PlayStation 3 — Ogre Battledriver (Duels of the Planeswalkers) (foil)
- Xbox 360 — Bonescythe Sliver (Duels of the Planeswalkers) (foil)
DotP 2015
- Xbox 360, Xbox One - Soul of Ravnica (Duels of the Planeswalkers) (foil)
- PC, iPad, Android - Soul of Zendikar (Duels of the Planeswalkers) (foil)
Gift Box promos[ | ]
Resale promos[ | ]
Included in special blister packs that include three random Magic booster packs plus the foil promo. Available at "big-box" stores such as Walmart, Target, and Meijer.
References[ | ]
- ↑ Magic Arcana (November 20, 2002). "APAC Lands I". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Magic Arcana (November 21, 2002). "APAC Lands II". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Magic Arcana (November 22, 2002). "APAC Lands III". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Magic Arcana (May 10, 2002). "Guru Lands". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Magiclibrarities Japanese promos
- ↑ Magic Arcana (January 12, 2009). "Japanese MPS Lands". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Monty Ashley (March 12, 2012). "Japanese MPS Lands". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Wizards of the Coast (August 4, 2014). "Judge Promo Basic Lands". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Blake Rasmussen (January 25, 2017). "The January 25, 2017 Update". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ a b Mark Rosewater (June 20, 2016). "25 More Random Things About Magic". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (October 04, 2017). "What are the odds to reprint "1996 World Champion" or any other promo card?". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (September 23, 2018). "Why doesn't 1996 World Champion work within the rules?". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (October 13, 2014). "What's the story behind Shichifukujin Dragon?". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ Seven Lucky Gods
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (October 04, 2017). "Are Shichifukujin Dragon and 1996 World Champion on the Reserve List?". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ Actors Special Guest Gift Cards. Magic Librarities.
- ↑ u/valoopy (August 3, 2023). "Promo Lotus Petal from Gavin’s AMA at GenCon!". Reddit.
- ↑ Wizards of the Coast (August 3, 2023). "A Magical Birthday Celebration". Magic.gg. Archived from the original on August 3, 2023.
- ↑ Special Commemorative and Recognition Cards. Magic Librarities.
- ↑ Promo card for former Hasbro CFO, Deb Thomas. Reddit (May 11, 2024).
- ↑ a b Magic Arcana (June 04, 2008). "Crystalline Sliver Giveaway". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ a b Magic Arcana (December 01, 2008). "Pro Tour Promo: Treva!". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Trick Jarrett (April 25, 2013). "FNM + GP Promos". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Mike Rosenberg (December 4, 2015). "2015 World Magic Cup FAQ (And More!)". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Mike Rosenberg (October 27, 2016). "2017 GP and RPTQ Promos". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Scott Larabee (October 26, 2017). "Grand Prix Updates for 2018: Promos, Schedules, and the Day Two Cut". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Grand Prix Foil Promo Lands
- ↑ Magic Arcana (December 07, 2009). "Avatar of Whoa!". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Monty Ashley (January 10, 2011). "2011 Convention Promo Card". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Magic: The Gathering on Twitter
- ↑ Full Art Deeproot Champion Convention Promo. Reddit (2018).
- ↑ 2019 Convention Promo - Nightpack Ambusher. Reddit (July 20, 2019).
- ↑ Wizards of the Coast (June 11, 2024). "Magic at Gen Con". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Gavin Verhey (July 1, 2019). "Did y'all see this sweet new Sol Ring promo". Twitter.
- ↑ Gavin Verhey (July 1, 2019). "New Sol Ring promo to be available at MagicFest Las Vegas. Both foil and non-foil.". Coolstuffinc.com.
- ↑ Chinese New Year foil treasure tokens and Red Envelopes for CNY league - Taiwan. Reddit.
- ↑ Sethron, Hurloon General and Minotaur token. Reddit (January 19, 2021).
- ↑ Four New Promo Cards! - The Year of the Ox (Video). Good Morning Magic. YouTube (May 17, 2021).
- ↑ Wizards of the Coast (may 17, 2021). "Year of the Ox Store Challenger Series 2021 Promos". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Wizards of the Coast (February 9, 2022). "Celebrate the Year of the Tiger with APAC League Events and Promos". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Gavin Verhey (February 9, 2022). "Tiger promos!". Twitter.
- ↑ Wizards of the Coast (January 19, 2023). "2023 APAC League and The Year of the Rabbit". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Wizards of the Coast (December 19, 2023). "Play Standard. Get Promos. Jump Into the Action with These Year of the Dragon Promos!". Magic.gg.
- ↑ Magic Arcana (December 08, 2005). "Unhinged Arena Promos". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Magic Arcana (July 25, 2003). "Japan Junior Tournament". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ World Magic Cup Qualifiers
- ↑ Helene Bergeot (April 18, 2017). "Ixalan, Worlds, Pro Tour, Nationals, and RPTQs". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Wizards of the Coast (January 28, 2020). "A Crucible of Worlds Awaits the World Championship XXVI". Magic.gg.
- ↑ Magic Arcana (June 04, 2003). "Alternate oversized Serra". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Destroy all humans they can't be regenerated promo card. Reddit (October 4, 2024).
- ↑ Magic Arcana (August 20, 2002). "Different Scent". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (February 16, 2009). "25 Random Things About Magic". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Scott Johns (April 5, 2004). "Inside "You Decide!"". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Magic Librarities: Visions Alternate Art Cards
- ↑ Monty Ashley (October 13, 2011). "Comic Book!". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Monty Ashley (October 27, 2011). "Comic Book Previews!". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Monty Ashley (November 22, 2011). "Faithless Looting". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ a b Monty Ashley (February 13, 2012). "Comic Book Cards". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Monty Ashley (February 21, 2013). "Path of Vengeance #3". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Magic Arcana (April 11, 2003). "DCI promo cards". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Magic Arcana (March 05, 2009). "The Lowest DCI Number". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Monty Ashley (August 19, 2010). "Plots That Span Centuries". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Commander product information page — Wizards of the Coast
- ↑ Commander 2013 product information page — Wizards of the Coast
- ↑ Adam Styborski (April 8, 2021). "Check Out The New Packaging for Commander (2021 Edition) and Beyond". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Magic Arcana (August 30, 2002). "Japanese Ice Age block cards". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Monty Ashley (July 12, 2010). "The Sorcerer's Apprentice". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Monty Ashley (July 13, 2010). "The Sorcerer's Apprentice". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Taalia Vess (December 16, 2023). "Promo Winged Boots. New Wizards_magic Stance X socks collab". Twitter.
- ↑ WPN (June 4, 2020). "Introducing Welcome Boosters, Coming With M21". Wizards Play Network.
- ↑ Wizards of the Coast (May 18, 2020). "Announcing Love Your LGS Promotion". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ WPN (May 26, 2020). "The First Buy-Any-Box Promo Card Is Coming Soon". Wizards Play Network.
- ↑ Wizards of the Coast (August 5th, 2021). "A First Look at Innistrad: Midnight Hunt and Innistrad: Crimson Vow". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Adam Styborski (May 6, 2021). "Welcome to the Summer of Legend". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ WPN (May 6, 2021). "Get Ready for the Return to In-Store Play with the Love Your Local Game Store Promotion". Wizards Play Network.
- ↑ WPN (June 21, 2021). "Love Your Local Game Store Promotion Continues July 23 in the U.S.". Wizards Play Network.
- ↑ Wizards of the Coast (May 12, 2022). "Your Sneak Peek at Double Masters 2022, Dominaria United, and Beyond". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ WPN (June 25, 2024). "Love Your Local Game Store 2024 Begins July 5 with All-New LYLGS Draft Event!". Wizards Play Network.
- ↑ Wizards of the Coast (July 12, 2021). "Limited to WPN stores! "Forgotten Realms Exploration" Special Card Binder & Rice Ball Promo Card Campaign". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Monty Ashley (June 16, 2010). "Duels of the Planeswalkers Launch Promotion". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Monty Ashley (March 30, 2011). "Duels of the Planeswalkers 2012 Promo Cards". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.