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, an MTG token is considered a permanent in the game Magic: The Gathering.
To copy a permanent in Magic: The Gathering (MTG), you can use cards or abilities that specifically allow you to create a copy of a permanent on the battlefield. Cards like "Clone" or abilities like "Mirage Mirror" can be used to copy a permanent, creating a new token that is a duplicate of the original permanent.
Yes, a planeswalker is considered a permanent in Magic: The Gathering.
Yes, an enchantment is considered a permanent in Magic: The Gathering.
An Ooze token is a creature that can be created. The token card is the representation of that creature.
The converted mana cost of a token copy in Magic: The Gathering is typically 0, as tokens do not have a mana cost.
Yes, in the game of Magic: The Gathering, a land is considered a permanent.
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.
The mana value of a Magic: The Gathering token is typically 0, as tokens do not have a mana cost and cannot be used to pay for spells or abilities that require mana.
No, token copies do not have devotion in Magic: The Gathering. Devotion counts the colored mana symbols in the mana costs of permanents you control, and tokens do not have mana costs.
In Magic: The Gathering, a land is a permanent card type that stays on the battlefield and provides mana to cast spells.