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Lor Kithkin Soldier

Kithkin Soldier token.

A token is a permanent that is not represented by a regular card with a casting cost.[1][2]

Description

Richard Garfield created tokens for Alpha, as opposed to counters, to make The Hive possible.[3] Usually, but not always, tokens are creatures.

Normally tokens can exist only on the battlefield. If a token leaves the battlefield and goes to another game zone, it can't change zones again, and it will be there only briefly before ceasing to exist as a state-based effect.

Tokens are made of diferent cardstock than regular cards. They don't have the opaque layer in the middle.[4]

History

Non-card tokens

There were so many cards in Fallen Empires that produced tokens and/or required counters that Wizards of the Coast issued a cardboard sheet of them in Duelist #4.[5]

Citadel Gaming released a series "Magic Tokens" starting in 1995 made of a plastic material.

The first token cards

Special token cards were first printed for Unglued.[6] Unglued's tokens proved so popular they spawned the new tokens given away in the Magic Player Rewards program.[7][8]

Eighth Edition

Like for regular cards, the card frame for tokens was updated with Eighth Edition. "Token" now appeared in the type line, though it never became an official subtype.[9]

Tenth Edition

Since Tenth Edition tokens appear as marketing cards in booster packs. Unlike earlier tokens, they don't have a regular card back, but feature advertisements instead. They also stopped printing "token" on the type line.

Magic 2015

Starting with Magic 2015 "Token" is now printed as a supertype on the type line.[10]

Battle for Zendikar

For Battle for Zendikar, the ratio between token cards and other marketing cards was shifted heavily in favor of tokens. The new ratio is approximately 9:10 for tokens. Tokens’ rarity is based upon the rarity of the cards that make them.[11]

Double-faced tokens

The first double-faced token was released as a special FNM card during the Innistrad block on April 6, 2012 (which featured a full moon). It fittingly represented a 1/1 human on one side, and a 2/2 wolf on the other.[12] The Avacyn Restored prerelease Helvault kit followed up with double-sided Angel/Demon tokens.[13]

The next chance for double-faced tokens came when the developers of Commander 2014 didn't have to share the tokens in that set with the brand team, and the production constraints that mandated Magic backs on the Duel Decks' tokens didn't apply. They created double-faced tokens which featured a different, unrelated, token on each side of the card.[14]

Magic Online

Because Magic Online needs to represent all the tokens in the game, art needs to be created for even the most insignificant tokens. And for some of that art, Magic Online is the only place it appears.[15][16]

Rules

From the glossary of the Comprehensive Rules (April 12, 2024—Outlaws of Thunder Junction)

Token
A marker used to represent any permanent that isn’t represented by a card. See rule 111, “Tokens.”

From the Comprehensive Rules (April 12, 2024—Outlaws of Thunder Junction)

  • 110.5. A permanent’s status is its physical state. There are four status categories, each of which has two possible values: tapped/untapped, flipped/unflipped, face up/face down, and phased in/phased out. Each permanent always has one of these values for each of these categories.
    • 110.5a Status is not a characteristic, though it may affect a permanent’s characteristics.
    • 110.5b Permanents enter the battlefield untapped, unflipped, face up, and phased in unless a spell or ability says otherwise.
    • 110.5c A permanent retains its status until a spell, ability, or turn-based action changes it, even if that status is not relevant to it.

      Example: Dimir Doppelganger says “{1}{U}{B}: Exile target creature card from a graveyard. Dimir Doppelganger becomes a copy of that card and gains this ability.” It becomes a copy of Jushi Apprentice, a flip card. Through use of Jushi Apprentice’s ability, this creature flips, making it a copy of Tomoya the Revealer with the Dimir Doppelganger ability. If this permanent then becomes a copy of Runeclaw Bear, it will retain its flipped status even though that has no relevance to Runeclaw Bear. If its copy ability is activated again, this time targeting a Nezumi Shortfang card (another flip card), this permanent’s flipped status means it will have the characteristics of Stabwhisker the Odious (the flipped version of Nezumi Shortfang) with the Dimir Doppelganger ability.

    • 110.5d Only permanents have status. Cards not on the battlefield do not. Although an exiled card may be face down, this has no correlation to the face-down status of a permanent. Similarly, cards not on the battlefield are neither tapped nor untapped, regardless of their physical state.

Examples

  • Teysa, Orzhov Scion has the ability: "Whenever another black creature you control dies, put a 1/1 white Spirit creature token with flying onto the battlefield." "Dies" means precisely "is put into a graveyard from the battlefield" (rule 700.6). If you have a black creature token that gets destroyed, it will go to the graveyard, trigger Teysa's ability, then disappear, and finally the ability will be put on the stack. However, the token cannot be the target of spells or abilities whilst in the graveyard.
  • Momentary Blink reads in part: "Exile target creature you control, then return it to the battlefield under its owner's control." If this spell is used on a creature token, it will be exiled, but it cannot come back to the battlefield and so stays in the exile zone. It will cease to exist when state-based effects are next checked.

Token specific types

Some creatures named in the legal subtype-list only appear on tokens.

MPR Elephant token 2001

Magic Player Reward 2001

MPR Rukh token 2003

Magic Player Reward 2003

M15 Zombie token 2014

Magic 2015 token

Template:Token specific types

Additionally, Pink Giant Teddy Bear tokens are created by the Unhinged card Water Gun Balloon Game.

Full list

  • Comprehensive Token Table - A comprehensive sortable table that lists every possible token that can be generated in Magic: the Gathering, the properties of those tokens, and the cards responsible for their creation (does not include tokens that copy other cards).

Trivia

References

  1. Mark Rosewater (May 27, 2002). "Tokens of My Affection". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  2. Mark Rosewater (May 27, 2013). "Token of Appreciation". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  3. Mark Rosewater (September 26, 2005). "+1/+1 For the Road". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  4. Eventide Token and Tips
  5. Magic Arcana (May 31, 2002). "Fallen Empires tokens". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  6. Magic Arcana (May 27, 2003). "Soldier Tokens". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  7. Mark Rosewater (April 5, 2004). "Unhinged or No?". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  8. Magic Arcana (May 27, 2002). "Player Rewards tokens". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  9. Magic Arcana (September 24, 2003). "The new look of tokens". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  10. Template:NewRef
  11. Error on call to {{WebRef}}: Parameters url and title must be specifiedMark Rosewater (October 18, 2015). "". Tumblr.
  12. Monty Ashley (March 28, 2012). "The Double-Faced Token". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  13. Monty Ashley (May 02, 2012). "The Helvault Experience". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  14. Template:NewRef
  15. Magic Arcana (July 30, 2002). "Unseen tokens". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  16. Magic Arcana (May 03, 2005). "Oyobi Spirit Token Art". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.

External links

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