In a Magic: The Gathering deck, you can include up to four copies of a card, unless the card specifies otherwise.
In a deck of Magic: The Gathering (MTG), typically there are 4 copies of a card included.
In Magic: The Gathering, a deck can have up to four copies of the same card, except for basic lands.
In Magic: The Gathering, a deck can include up to four copies of a legendary creature card.
In most formats of the game Magic: The Gathering, a deck can include up to four copies of a legendary creature card.
The odds of drawing a specific card in a game of Magic: The Gathering depend on the total number of cards in your deck and how many copies of that specific card are in the deck. If you have a 60-card deck and 4 copies of the card you want, the odds of drawing it on your first turn are about 6.7.
In the game, Magic: The Gathering, you can have up to four copies of a legendary creature card in your deck.
For optimal gameplay, a 100-card deck in Magic: The Gathering should typically include around 36 lands.
A Magic deck typically consists of 60 cards.
The Magic: The Gathering 2015 Core Set Deck Builder's Toolkit includes 125 semi-randomized cards, four 15-card booster packs from recent Magic sets, 100 basic land cards, a deck builder's guide, and a reusable card storage box.
A Magic deck typically includes 12 to 30 creatures.
In Magic: The Gathering, the legend rule does not apply when a player controls multiple copies of the same legendary card. This is because the rule only restricts players from having multiple copies of the same legendary card under their control, not in their deck or graveyard.
A Magic: The Gathering deck typically consists of 60 cards.