In Magic: The Gathering, a land is a permanent card type that stays on the battlefield and provides mana to cast spells.
Yes, in the game of Magic: The Gathering, a land is considered a permanent.
In Magic: The Gathering, land cards are permanent cards that stay on the battlefield and provide mana for casting spells.
Yes, in Magic: The Gathering (MTG), a land is considered a permanent.
Yes, a planeswalker is considered a permanent in Magic: The Gathering.
Yes, an enchantment is considered a permanent in Magic: The Gathering.
Yes, a planeswalker is considered a nonland permanent in Magic: The Gathering.
No, destroying a permanent does not count as dealing damage in Magic: The Gathering.
"Valakut" is a land card in Magic: The Gathering.
No, a token is not permanent in Magic: The Gathering. Tokens are temporary creatures or other game elements created by card effects and are not considered permanent cards.
Yes they are. Regardless of the colour of mana they produce, a land is still a colourless permanent unless an external source is giving it a colour.
Yes, an emblem in Magic: The Gathering (MTG) is considered a permanent.
In Magic: The Gathering, a player can destroy an indestructible permanent by using cards or abilities that specifically exile, bounce, or sacrifice the permanent instead of destroying it. These methods can bypass the indestructible ability and remove the permanent from the battlefield.