Serial numbered card: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Mirrored Viscera Seer.jpg|thumb|right|Mirrored Viscera Seer #15 of 100]]
[[File:Mirrored Viscera Seer.jpg|thumb|right|Mirrored Viscera Seer #15 of 100]]
'''Serial numbered cards''' are ''[[Magic: The Gathering]]'' chase cards are serial numbered with a stamp in the of the [[Illustration|art box]].  
'''Serial numbered cards''' are ''[[Magic: The Gathering]]'' chase cards that are serial numbered with a stamp in the of the [[Illustration|art box]].  


==History==
==History==

Revision as of 20:20, 17 October 2022

Mirrored Viscera Seer #15 of 100

Serial numbered cards are Magic: The Gathering chase cards that are serial numbered with a stamp in the of the art box.

History

Serial numbering

Serial numbering means every individual card is marked, either by a machine or by hand, with a unique number, usually followed by the maximum number in the run. Serial numbering first appeared on non-Magic trading cards in 1990 with Pro Set Football's Vince Lombardi Trophy Hologram card.[1][2][3]

Mirrored cards

"Mirrored cards" or "reversed cards" are serial numbered cards that are printed with their rules text and illustration in reverse. The golden stamp in the lower right corner of the art box is non-reversed. They are numbered #1 of 100 to of #100 of 100.

Viscera Seer

The 100 mirrored Viscera Seers are the first series of serial numbered cards to appear in the context of Magic: The Gathering. The first of these cards was found in November 2021 as a bonus card in a foil Phyrexian Praetors: Compleat Edition packaging.[4] The second card found was #15 and was found in a non-foil version of the same Secret Lair drop.[5]

Retro Frame Artifacts

The Retro Frame Artifacts set associated with The Brothers' War, as released in November 2022, has versions of the "schematic" art that are double-rainbow foiled and numbered up to #500 in the lower left corner of the art box.[6]

Gallery

References

  1. Serial Number. Baseballcardpedia.com.
  2. DefGav (July 30, 2013). "The Best Serial Numbers!". Baseballcardbreakdown.blogspot.com.
  3. Trading Cards Explained. Upperdeck.com.
  4. Ben Bleiweiss (November 11, 2021). "Just opened what appears to be an AMAZINGLY RARE card.". Twitter.
  5. Andrew Smith, Facebook, #MTGRarities: Major Misprints, Test Prints, Oddities
  6. Blake Rasmussen (September 29, 2022). "A First Look at the The Brothers' War". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.