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Eighth Edition
8th Editionlogo
Set Information
Set symbol
Symbol description An '8' before a fan of cards
Design Randy Buehler Jr.
Elaine Chase
Michael Donais
Robert Gutschera
William Jockusch
Mark Rosewater
with contributions from
Paul Barclay
Kierin Chase
Brady Dommermuth
Development Same as design
Art direction Jeremy Cranford
Release date July 28, 2003
Plane Dominaria
Keywords/​ability words Fear newly keyworded
Set size 357 (113 Common, 113 Uncommon, 111 Rare, 20 Land)
Expansion code 8ED[2]
Core sets
[[Seventh Edition]] [[Eighth Edition]] [[Ninth Edition]]
Magic: The Gathering Chronology
[[Scourge]] Eighth Edition [[Mirrodin]]

Core Set Eighth Edition (8th Edition) is a Magic Core Set that was released on July 29, 2003. It marked the 10th Anniversary of Magic. [3]

Set details

Eighth Edition featured 357 white-bordered cards (110 rare, 110 uncommon, 110 common, 7 fixed, and 20 basic lands), including cards from every previous expansion set since Alpha. [4] The seven fixed cards only appeared in the Core Game pack. The set introduced a new cardface design that allowed for larger art and more card text.

Eighth Edition added reminder text about flying to those creatures that have the ability. it was also the first core set to see Fear in print (Fear was keyworded in Onslaught). The tap symbol changed to the simple, straightforward, easy-to-see curved arrow, without the rectangle behind it. [5] The set introduced the basic supertype for lands.

Card frame

The colored frames around the edges of the card were redesigned and narrowed, boxes were placed around card names and creatures' Power/Toughness, card names were printed in a more modern font (Matrix Bold, rather than Goudy Medieval) and mana symbols appearing in the text box of artifacts were no longer colored. [6][7]

Some players felt the new look interfered with the 'classical' fantasy feel of the game. [8] An early problem was that the new card frames of white and artifact cards were hard to tell apart with a quick glance, which lead to the darkening of the frame of artifact cards with Fifth Dawn. [9] The gray mana symbols in the textbox of artifact cards were corrected with Ravnica: City of Guilds.

Marketing

Eighth Edition was marketed as Core Set, because there were concerns that older base sets confused newer players — their primary audience — by making them feel like they "missed out" on five or six previous editions and were hopelessly behind. [10] The set logo was still an "8" and it is still commonly referred to as Eighth Edition.

Eighth Edition was set to be released to coincide with the 10th Anniversary of Magic: the Gathering 's original release[11], so the developers took a different approach to the core set. Every previous expansion (34 sets in all) had at least one card reprinted in Eighth Edition that had not been reprinted in the base set before, with a series of votes on Magicthegathering.com website deciding what got reprinted.[12][13][14] New artwork for the reprintes often referenced the old art[15] and fans could submit their own flavor text throug the FlavOracle.[12] "Global Celebration" tournaments were held July 26-27, 2003 as a release event of Eighth Edition and a commemoration of Magic 's 10th Anniversary.[16] The release card was a foil Rukh Egg.[17] A 4/4 Rukh Token with Flying for the same card was featured as a Player Reward. [18]

Eighth was sold in 15-card-booster packs, 5 different Theme decks and a Core Game (which was a 2-Player Starter Set), but not in tournament packs. The boosters featured artwork from Blinding Angel, Lhurgoyf, Phyrexian Plaguelord, Two-Headed Dragon and Tidal Kraken.

The set featured randomly inserted premium black bordered versions of all cards in the set, and also oversized Box-Topper Cards found at the top of each booster display box. [19] The Eighth Edition came with both 24-card Demogame boosters and 10-card sampler packs.

Rules changes

A rules change was that the card draw each turn no longer used the stack. [20] Instead the player simply draws a card as their draw step starts. They see what they draw before abilities that trigger "at the beginning of your draw step" are put onto the stack. Spells and abilities that affect the normal card draw should be played during the upkeep step, not the draw step. The type line of each basic land now included the words "Basic Land" and the land's type, separated by a long dash. For example, a Forest card has the printed type line "Basic Land — Forest." Plains, Island, Swamp, Mountain, and Forest cards printed in earlier sets should be treated as though they had the same type line as the Eighth Edition basic lands.

Cycles

Eighth Edition has 3 cycles.

Theme decks

The preconstructed theme decks are:[21]

Theme
deck name
Colors Included
{W} {U} {B} {R} {G}
Life Boost W
Sky Slam U
Expulsion B
Speed Scorch R
Heavy Hitters G

Cards added to Eighth Edition

Whenever a development team at the time worked on a base set, they made a wish list of cards they wanted to include but were unable to as the card did not exist and they were not allowed to add new cards. In essence, the team ordered cards for the next base set (traditionally two years later). This meants that the Seventh Edition development team had made a wish list for Eighth Edition. [22]

Changes in rarity to Eighth Edition

The Circle of Protection series, a perennial core set entity, remained in the set but changed from common to uncommon.

Cards removed from Seventh Edition

References

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External links

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