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The year '''1995''' was the | The year '''1995''' was the third year of existence for ''[[Magic: The Gathering]]''. | ||
== Events == | == Events == | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" |
Latest revision as of 07:32, 2 April 2024
The year 1995 was the third year of existence for Magic: The Gathering.
Events
Date | Event |
---|---|
Early 1995 | Printing of the Alternate Fourth Edition by the United States Playing Card Corporation in Cincinnati. Due to a dispute, the cards were never officially published. |
January 10 | Creation of the Standard format (then called "Type 2") |
February | Black Lotus reaches $100 on the secondary market. |
Spring | First official binder for Magic cards published by Wizards of the Coast |
April | First Prerelease. |
April | Release of Fourth Edition.
|
April | First issue of InQuest, a magazine dedicated to Trading Card Games. |
April | Black Lotus reaches $200 on secondary market. |
May | First regionals in the US, start of the rise of Mark Justice and Henry Stern. |
June 2–4 | The first prerelease for an expansion, a single event in Toronto, Canada. Won by Dave Humpherys. |
Early June | Release of Ice Age, the first standalone set.
|
July | Release of Chronicles, a "best of 1994" extension of the Fourth Edition. Later to be considered a failed experiment.
|
July | First printing of a Magic comic: The Shadow Mage |
August | Release of Renaissance, a black-bordered reprint set for the German, French, and Italian markets. |
August 5–7 | 1995 World Championships in Seattle, USA. Won by Alexander Blumke.
|
September | Black Lotus reaches $300 on secondary market. |
September | Magic's first price increase. |
September | Separation of Type 1 and Type 2 formats (now known as Vintage and Standard). |
October | Start of The Dojo, a website dedicated to Magic. |
October 14 | First release events, called Magic: The Gathering I in New York City, Essen (Germany) and other locations. |
October 14 | Release of Homelands, a flavor driven set. Purportedly, the worst designed set ever.[1] |
October | Billionth Magic card released. |
November | Wizards of the Coast moves to Renton office. |
December | Wizards of the Coast close their roleplaying game product line. |
December | DCI gets its 1,000th member. |
Publications
- Final Sacrifice - March
- Shattered Chains - March
- The Pocket Players' Guide for Magic: The Gathering - Fourth Edition - April
- Tapestries - July
- The Shadow Mage - July till October
- Ice Age (comic) - July till October
- The Cursed Land - September
- The Prodigal Sorcerer - October
- Nightmare (comic) - November
- Wayfarer - November, December
- Antiquities War - November, December
- Arabian Nights (comic) - December
First involved
Wizards of the Coast
- Jennifer Clarke-Wilkes, writer
- Joe Hauck, brand
- Hélène Bergeot, organized play
Design and Development
Artists
- Ice Age
- Catherine Buck
- James Ernest
- L.A. Williams (ak.k.a. Allen Williams)
- Mike Raabe
- Philip Mosness
- Randy Gallegos
- Rick Emond
- Ruth Thompson
- Homelands
- DCI promos
- Dom!
- Jock