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==Summer Magic== | ==Summer Magic== | ||
When the ''Revised Edition'' was in production in [[1994]], a number of problems with the set became apparent. The colors were washed out, the picture for | When the ''Revised Edition'' was in production in [[1994]], a number of problems with the set became apparent. The colors were washed out, the picture for {{card|Serendib Efreet||SUM}} was wrong, and there was a growing concern with the Satanic images on some of the cards. The solution was to print a fixed version of the ''Revised Edition'', code-named "Edgar",<ref>{{DailyRef|feature/magic-history-time-2009-06-01|A Magic History of Time|[[Michael G. Ryan]]|June 01, 2009}}</ref> which has since come to be known as '''Summer Magic''' because it was printed in the summer of 1994. The cards were distributed in regular ''Revised Edition'' boosters – no Summer edition starters were produced. | ||
Despite its intended function as a fixed Revised Edition, there were many problems with the printing. On some cards, the colors were too dark. Serendib Efreet had its artwork corrected, but the artist credit was not. The artist name for | Despite its intended function as a fixed Revised Edition, there were many problems with the printing. On some cards, the colors were too dark. Serendib Efreet had its artwork corrected, but the artist credit was not. The artist name for {{card|Plateau||SUM}} was not corrected. ''[[Blue Hurricane|Hurricane]]'' was printed with a blue border and became the most famous and most desired Summer Magic card of all. Because of all these flaws, the entire print run was recalled for destruction which led to the great Revised Edition shortage of 1994. However, about four [[Booster pack|case]]s (40 [[booster box]]es) of "Edgar" survived and were shipped to locations in the U.S. and the UK. Probable locations include Tennessee, Texas, and Ireland. | ||
Summer Magic cards can best be recognized by their prominent 1994 copyright date (a feature missing in ''Revised''), as well as their richer colors. Today a ''Summer Magic'' | Summer Magic cards can best be recognized by their prominent 1994 copyright date (a feature missing in ''Revised''), as well as their richer colors. Today a ''Summer Magic'' {{card|Birds of Paradise||SUM}} is worth well over a thousand dollars. Among the rarest ''Magic'' cards in existence are the [[blue Hurricane]]s.<ref>{{DailyRef|arcana/blue-hurricane-2003-06-24|Blue Hurricane|[[Magic Arcana]]|June 24, 2003}}</ref><ref>{{DailyRef|ask-wizards-october-2008-2008-10-01|Ask Wizards|[[Brian Tinsman]]|October 6, 2008}}</ref> | ||
==Notable cards== | ==Notable cards== |
Revision as of 21:30, 13 April 2021
Revised Edition | |||||
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[[File:{{#setmainimage:MTG BW.jpg}}|250px]] | |||||
Set Information | |||||
Set symbol | |||||
Design |
Richard Garfield with contributions from Charlie Cateeno Skaff Elias Don Felice Tom Fontaine Jim Lin Joel Mick Chris Page Dave Pettey Barry "Bit" Reich Bill Rose Elliott Segal | ||||
Development | Same as design | ||||
Art direction | Jesper Myrfors | ||||
Release date | April 1994 | ||||
Plane | Multiverse | ||||
Set size |
306 cards (75 commons, 95 uncommons, 121 rares, 15 basic lands) | ||||
Expansion code | 3ED[1] | ||||
Core sets | |||||
| |||||
Magic: The Gathering Chronology | |||||
|
The Revised Edition, or Revised as it is commonly called, is the third edition of the Magic core sets. It was released in April 1994.
Set details
Wizards of the Coast made multiple attempts to print an improved version of the Core Set before finally getting Revised out the door.[2] Revised consisted of 306 cards. The set was originally designed without a visible marker of rarity as Wizards of the Coast wished for the specific rarity of each card to remain hidden; however, with the eventual inclusion of rarity on the card face, they retroactively determined the rarity of each card in the set (15 Basic lands, 75 Common, 95 Uncommon, 121 Rare). Revised was the first Core Set to "rotate" some cards out, some of which were considered to be "problem cards," and replace them with other cards from previously printed limited expansions. The expansions available at the time were Arabian Nights and Antiquities.[3]
Due to the printing process, it is possible to get basic land cards in an uncommon or common card slot. The chance is approximately 21.5% for uncommons and 38.02% for commons. This is because the printer put lands on all the uncommon and common sheets.
An early advertisement in The Duelist #1 stated that Revised cards would be gray-bordered, but they ultimately became white-bordered like the Unlimited Edition. A production oversight resulted in the "bevel" that framed the cards being cropped off. Also, well-used printing films gave the cards faded colors. Many players complained at the lack of quality of the set; both the card power and the look.
Marketing
Cards were available from mid April 1994 through mid April 1995. The print run is estimated at 500 million cards.[4] The cards were sold in 60-card starter decks and 15-card boosters. The starter deck rulebook has Shivan Dragon on the cover and a checklist on the back and last pages. Revised was the first set that was supplemented with a special Gift Box. The Revised Gift Box (released on November 15, 1994) included two starter decks, 30 glass counters, a flannel bag for storing the counters, an illustrated rulebook and a card collectors' checklist.
Revised was the first set to be published in other languages than English: French, German and Italian. All had a black-bordered and a white-bordered print run.
Rules
As the players' knowledge of the game and its potential developed, so did the knowledge of the designers and developers. Their collaboration led to the first Magic: The Gathering Pocket Player's Guide, which solidified the rules of Magic. However, for later editions the rules would change many times over.
Revised introduced the first tap symbol: A slightly tilted T inside a gray circle. The artifact types Mono and Poly became obsolete, the types were removed from cards that had them and tap symbols were added where they were previously implied by the type. The set also changed references to mana color in card texts to mana symbols.[5]
Cycles
Revised has 5 cycles.
Double cycles
Cycle name | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dual lands | Tundra | Underground Sea | Badlands | Taiga | Savannah | Scrubland | Volcanic Island | Bayou | Plateau | Tropical Island |
Rare nonbasic lands that each produce two colors of mana. |
Pairs
Revised has 23 mirrored pairs.
Mirrored Pairs | ||
---|---|---|
Ankh of Mishra () |
Dingus Egg () |
Rare artifacts deal damage when a land enters or leaves the battlefield. |
Air Elemental () |
Earth Elemental () |
Uncommon Elemental creatures each have a mana cost of MM and a power of 4. |
Benalish Hero () |
Timber Wolves () |
1/1 creatures with banding and a mana cost of M. |
Castle () |
Orcish Oriflamme () |
Uncommon enchantments that conditionally affect its owner's creature's power or toughness. |
Crusade () |
Bad Moon () |
Rare enchantments with a converted mana cost of 2 and an effect to give all creatures of its color +1/+1. |
White Knight () |
Black Knight () |
Uncommon knights with a mana cost of MM, power/toughness of 2/2, first strike and protection from the other's color. |
Blue Elemental Blast () |
Red Elemental Blast () |
Common instants (formerly interrupts) with a mana cost of M and with a modal ability to either destroy a permanent of the other's color or counter a spell of the other's color. |
Braingeyser () |
Mind Twist () |
Rare sorceries that cause target player to draw or discard cards. |
Deathgrip () |
Lifeforce () |
Uncommon enchantments with an activated ability to counter a spell of the other's color for MM. |
Earthquake () |
Hurricane () |
Sorceries that have a mana cost of M and deal damage to all non-flying or flying creatures and each player. |
Feedback () |
Wanderlust () |
Uncommon Auras that deal 1 damage to the controller of the enchanted permanent during each of their upkeeps. |
Water Elemental () |
Fire Elemental () |
Uncommon elementals with a mana cost of 3MM and a power/toughness of 5/4. |
Holy Strength () |
Unholy Strength () |
Common auras with enchant creature that give a mirrored bonus to the enchanted creature's power/toughness. |
Living Lands () |
Kormus Bell () |
Rare cards that turned lands of a particular type into 1/1 creatures. |
Lord of Atlantis () |
Goblin King () |
Rare lords that give +1/+1 and landwalk of its color to its creature type. |
Manabarbs () |
Power Surge () |
Rare red enchantments that deal damage to a player based on the number of lands they do or don't tap. |
Mons's Goblin Raiders () |
Merfolk of the Pearl Trident () |
1/1 common creatures with creature types that are affected by their respective lords (e.g., Goblin King and Lord of Atlantis). |
Phantom Monster () |
Roc of Kher Ridges () |
3/3 creatures with flying and a mana cost of M. |
Serra Angel () |
Sengir Vampire () |
Uncommon 4/4 flying creatures with a mana cost of MM and a combat-related ability. |
Smoke () |
Winter Orb () |
Both allow players to only untap one of a type of permanent each turn. |
Tsunami () |
Flashfires () |
Uncommon sorceries that have a mana cost of M and destroy lands of a particular enemy type. |
Wall of Bone () |
Wall of Brambles () |
Walls with regeneration and a mana cost of M and a combined power/toughness of 5. |
Wall of Water () |
Wall of Fire () |
0/5 walls illustrated by Richard Thomas with a silouetted figure behind a wall and the activated ability "M: [this] gets +1/+0 until end of turn." |
Summer Magic
When the Revised Edition was in production in 1994, a number of problems with the set became apparent. The colors were washed out, the picture for Serendib Efreet was wrong, and there was a growing concern with the Satanic images on some of the cards. The solution was to print a fixed version of the Revised Edition, code-named "Edgar",[6] which has since come to be known as Summer Magic because it was printed in the summer of 1994. The cards were distributed in regular Revised Edition boosters – no Summer edition starters were produced.
Despite its intended function as a fixed Revised Edition, there were many problems with the printing. On some cards, the colors were too dark. Serendib Efreet had its artwork corrected, but the artist credit was not. The artist name for Plateau was not corrected. Hurricane was printed with a blue border and became the most famous and most desired Summer Magic card of all. Because of all these flaws, the entire print run was recalled for destruction which led to the great Revised Edition shortage of 1994. However, about four cases (40 booster boxes) of "Edgar" survived and were shipped to locations in the U.S. and the UK. Probable locations include Tennessee, Texas, and Ireland.
Summer Magic cards can best be recognized by their prominent 1994 copyright date (a feature missing in Revised), as well as their richer colors. Today a Summer Magic Birds of Paradise is worth well over a thousand dollars. Among the rarest Magic cards in existence are the blue Hurricanes.[7][8]
Notable cards
- At the time of its reprinting, the common Atog was the card that had more copies in existence than any other.[9]
Misprints
- Ivory Tower — Margaret Organ-Kean's name is misspelled "Margaret Organ-Keen".
- Onulet — Incorrect artist is listed; it should be Anson Maddocks, not Kerstin Kaman.
- Plateau — Incorrect artist is listed, it should be Cornelius Brudi, not Drew Tucker.[10]
- Serendib Efreet — Printed with a green background and the picture of the Ifh-Bíff Efreet. It still has the proper casting cost and text, however.
- The French version (printed with the correct background and picture) has flavor text that is missing on the English card.
Core set changes
References
- ↑ Wizards of the Coast (August 02, 2004). "Ask Wizards - August, 2004". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ David Howell: The Regathering
- ↑ Magic Arcana (October 31, 2002). ""Revising" the base set". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Ryan William Rooks (2013), A Collector's History of Magic the Gathering
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (October 04, 2004). "Change For the Better". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Michael G. Ryan (June 01, 2009). "A Magic History of Time". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Magic Arcana (June 24, 2003). "Blue Hurricane". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Brian Tinsman (October 6, 2008). "Ask Wizards". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (October 22, 2018). "How Trivial". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Magic Arcana (February 20, 2002). "Plateau(s)". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.