In Magic: The Gathering, a deck can have up to four copies of the same card, except for basic lands.
In a deck of Magic: The Gathering (MTG), typically there are 4 copies of a card included.
In a Magic: The Gathering deck, you can include up to four copies of a card, unless the card specifies otherwise.
A Magic: The Gathering deck typically consists of 60 cards.
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.
For optimal gameplay, a 100-card deck in Magic: The Gathering should typically include around 36 lands.
One recommended red tutor card for your Magic: The Gathering deck is "Gamble." It allows you to search your library for a card and put it into your hand, but you have to discard a card at random.
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: The Gathering deck typically includes 60 cards, with a mix of creatures, spells, and other cards.
The average cost of building a competitive deck in Magic: The Gathering can range from 200 to 500, depending on the format and specific cards included.
A standard Magic: The Gathering deck should have 60 cards for optimal gameplay.
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.