There wasn't a first card per se, there was a test set created and used by the developers.
Someone on the original design team would probably be able to tell you one of the inital cards that were created.
The test set were hand drawn art, stuck to playing cards.
Magic The Gathering
Magic The Gathering the world's premier, and first trading card game.
Depends on the card.
Win a MTG Invitational tournament
Richard Garfield's favorite card is Cursed Scroll. He really like that card artwork.
Yeah. An Island
MTG - MGIC Investment Corp. (NYSE)MTG - Magic The Gathering (Trading Card Game)MTG - Modern Times Group (a leading international entertainment broadcasting group with the second largest geographical broadcast footprint in Europe.)MTG - Musical Theatre Guild (The non-profit, student-run MIT Musical Theatre Guild is the oldest and largest theatre organization at MIT.)
If you mean "a mtg card that doubles all plus 1 plus 1 counters"Yes, any card that has the Proliferate ability:Contagion ClaspContagion EngineInexorable TideSteady ProgressThrummingbirdThrone of GethCore ProwlerFuel for the CausePlaguemaw BeastSpread the SicknessGrim AfflictionTezzeret's GambitViral DrakeVolt Charge
the abbreviation is mtg
$.25 as per Channelfireball.com Channelfireball is the standard that most people go by for MTG prices.
A tip card is a non-playable card included in most MTG booster packs. When they first started they were cards with gameplay tips printed on them, currently some have tips and some are just promotional or have tokens printed on there reverse. It is not included in the pack count.
No. The Shroud ability only works when the card is on the battlefield, not on the stack or anywhere else.
The suggested retail price of a booster pack (15 cards - sometimes more) is $3.99. Taking into consideration a margin of profit, I estimate the cost of production for a non-foil, common MTG card to be anywhere from $.03 to $.07. This would allow for Wizards to make profit.