When did MTG change border?

When did MTG change border?

With Magic 2015 going forward, the width of the border was reduced by almost a millimeter all the way around. Originally only black and white bordered were tournament legal. In April 2017 this was changed to “non-silver” due to the introduction of non-regular border cards.

What is a borderless MTG card?

In Draft Boosters, we continue to feature exciting borderless and showcase treatments. For non-foil cards, 1 in about 3½ Draft Boosters will have a showcase or borderless card (any rarity excluding basic lands) with about 1 in 15 Draft Boosters having that card being a rare or mythic rare.

What does it mean when a Magic card has a white border?

Excluding the Portal and Starter sets, white borders denoted cards that were reprints. It wasn’t done to help cards keep their value, though. It was to help players sort their cards. If you saw a white border, you automatically knew the card was a reprint from a black-bordered set.

When did MTG start using black borders?

1993
This is the default way for a card to look and has been since the very first Magic cards back in 1993. A black border surrounding the card pretty much means this is the default, expected form of the card and there’s nothing special with it – at least border-wise.

Is 6th edition white border?

The white border cards were mostly from older core sets, to distinguish them from expert sets. They are legal in current formats if they share an English name with a card that’s legal in the format in question. For example, a white-bordered 6th Ed. Giant Growth is legal because it was printed in Return to Ravnica.

Are white-bordered Magic cards worth anything?

White borders with these symbols are from Chronicles, and aren’t worth as much (tricksy hobbitses). Alpha and Beta cards are black bordered with no printed copyright date or set symbol. Alpha card corners are much more rounded than typical Magic cards.

Is core set 2021 worth it?

Core Set 2021 is a great Magic: The Gathering set – and along with any great set comes a plethora of cards that can help reshape the way MTG is played in various formats and at various levels. That means that no matter what kind of player you are, you’ll be able to find something new to mess around with.

How can you tell a rare Magic: The Gathering card?

To tell if a card is rare or mythic rare we look at the expansion set symbol. Almost all cards will have an expansion set symbol on it to help you identify it. The colour of this symbol will tell you what rarity the card is; common = black, uncommon = silver, rare = gold, mythic = orange-red / bronze.

How can you tell an Alpha Magic card?

ALPHA cards are black bordered and have very very rounded edges (2mm radius) compared to all other kinds of magic cards (1mm radius). Just pick up a black bordered card and overlay them on top of each other. If the corners are VERY different then you have ALPHA, otherwise you have BETA.

How can you tell old Magic sets apart?

The easy way to tell what edition a card is from is by checking the symbol on the right side of the bar between the art and the text box. This is the expansion symbol which tells you the set it’s from.