Do token copies trigger the legendary rule?

Yes, token copies of legendary creatures absolutely trigger the Legend Rule (now called the "legend rule") in Magic: The Gathering, because tokens are permanents and are treated like normal cards once on the battlefield; if you control two or more legendary permanents with the same name, you must put all but one into the graveyard as a state-based action. The rule cares about the name, not whether the permanent is a token or a card, so if a token copy shares the legendary name with another legendary permanent, they both go away.
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Do token copies trigger the legend rule?

Yes, it does. If a token copy creating ability does not state that the token isn't legendary, then the token is legendary if the original creature was, and the legend rule applies. Same for if a creature you control becomes a copy of a legendary creature.
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Do tokens follow the legendary rule?

Yes, the legendary rule applies to legendary tokens in Magic: The Gathering because tokens are permanents, so if you control multiple legendary permanents with the same name, you must put all but one into their owner's graveyard, regardless of whether they are tokens or cards. The rule cares about the name and the Legendary supertype, not if it's a physical card or a token, though some specific cards create non-legendary tokens to bypass this. 
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Are there exceptions to the legend rule?

Currently, only a handful of cards circumvent the "legend rule": Mirror Gallery, Mirror Box and Sakashima of a Thousand Faces cancel the rule entirely. Cadric, Soul Kindler and The Master, Multiplied cancel the rule for tokens you control. Sliver Gravemother cancels the rule for Slivers you control.
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What happens if you make a token copy of a clone?

A token that's a copy of Clone will enter as a copy of "whatever Clone is" in terms of its copiable values (C.R. 707.2). This takes into account copy effects such as that of Clone's ability (C.R. 707.2).
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TR&CI 38: The Legend Rule & State-Based Actions

Does copying a spell trigger Rhystic study?

No. When they cast a spell, your [[Rhystic Study]] trigger goes on the stack.
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What is the rule 701.27 A in Magic The Gathering?

701.27a To proliferate means to choose any number of permanents and/or players that have a counter, then give each one additional counter of each kind that permanent or player already has.
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What cards ignore legend rule?

  • Brothers Yamazaki.
  • Cadric, Soul Kindler.
  • Mirror Box.
  • Mirror Gallery.
  • Sakashima of a Thousand Faces.
  • Sliver Gravemother.
  • Spider-Verse.
  • The Master, Multiplied.
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Does legend rule still trigger ETB?

The effect will still trigger, but won't go on the stack until SBAs are checked. The legend rule will apply, and you put ETBs on the stack, but by the time the triggered abilities are resolving, you would've applied the legend rule long before.
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Does the legend rule apply to clones?

Yes, you can copy a legendary creature.

But copies of permanents are also subject to the legend rule. If you copy your opponent's creature, everything's fine.
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Can you make token copies of legendary artifacts?

The token will be an exact copy, and so if the creature was a legend, the token will be too and the legend rule will apply. Though, you'd have to go pretty far out of your way to get both in play since you have to exile the creature from your graveyard in order to embalm it.
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Does sacrificing a token trigger descend?

No, sacrificing a token does not count as "descending" in Magic: The Gathering because Descend specifically requires a permanent card to be put into the graveyard, and tokens are never considered cards, even if they are represented by one or briefly exist in the graveyard before ceasing to exist. While tokens are permanents and dying tokens trigger "dies" effects, Descend's precise wording ("permanent card") excludes them. 
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What artifact makes the legend rule not apply?

Mirror Gallery

The “legend rule” doesn't apply. Only in mirrors do heroes find their equal.
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Is a copy of a token still a token?

Some tokens are copies but not all copies are tokens. A copy of a spell on the stack is not a token. A creature token that is a copy of another creature is a token. A creature card that enters the battlefield as a copy, or an effect that makes a creature (card) into a copy isn't a token.
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Why are the planet lands not legendary?

Named lands often aren't legendary anymore because it was a design issue for constructed where the restriction was disliked. Maybe they will make a Planet rule similar to the Legend rule. Making the planet lands legendary is unnecessary from a balancing standpoint because they require so much investment and are slow.
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Do tokens trigger death triggers?

Tokens go to the graveyard long enough to trigger "dies" effects before they cease to exist. As this video explains in more detail.
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Does the legendary rule apply to tokens?

Yes, the legendary rule absolutely applies to tokens in Magic: The Gathering; if you control two legendary permanents (token or not) with the same name, you must put one into your graveyard, as the rule only cares about the name and the legendary supertype, not if it's a token or a card, though some card effects specifically create nonlegendary tokens to bypass this.
 
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Do token copies have ETB triggers?

Yes, creating a token copy absolutely triggers "enters-the-battlefield" (ETB) effects because the token is a new permanent that enters the battlefield, just like a normally summoned creature. Any abilities on the copied creature (or other cards on the field) that say "When ~ enters the battlefield..." will trigger when the token arrives. 
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Does the legend rule apply immediately?

It's immediately. It happens before priority is passed. And you can't maintain priority as it checks before then too. You also can't use another effect that would allow you to sacrifice a permanent either.
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Is Legendary Rule dying?

Yes, in Magic: The Gathering, when the Legend Rule forces you to put legendary permanents into your graveyard, they are considered to have "died" (moved from battlefield to graveyard) and trigger death-related effects, though it's not technically a "sacrifice" and you can't respond to the rule itself because it's a state-based action. 
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How does the legendary rule work?

The legendary rule in Magic: The Gathering states that if a player controls two or more legendary permanents with the exact same name, they must choose one to keep and put the rest into their graveyard as a state-based action. This happens automatically, without the stack, so players can't respond by sacrificing or activating abilities before the choice is made, but any "enter the battlefield" (ETB) or "leaves the battlefield"/"dies" triggers from the affected legends do still happen.
 
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Does legend rule trigger death triggers?

Yes, the Legend Rule does trigger "when this creature dies" effects because the legendary permanent goes from the battlefield to the graveyard, which is the definition of dying in Magic: The Gathering, even though it's a state-based action and not a sacrifice or destruction. You get the death triggers, but you can't respond to the rule itself because it happens before you get priority, according to rules from Magic: The Gathering on YouTube and Facebook. 
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What is the 75% rule in Magic The Gathering?

The MTG "75% rule" is a popular, unofficial deck-building philosophy, mainly for Commander, about creating decks powerful enough to compete but not so dominant they ruin the fun for casual players, finding a middle ground in power level by intentionally leaving out the most optimal, expensive, or meta-defining cards. It's about building a deck that's "75% as strong as it can be," allowing it to challenge optimized decks occasionally while still being fair in more casual games, making it adaptable for various playgroups.
 
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What is the 116 rule in Magic The Gathering?

Rule 116 in Magic's official rulebook explains something called “special actions.” These are things a player can do during their turn that happen instantly and cannot be interrupted by other players. The most common example is playing a land. It just happens right away.
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Does shroud block proliferate?

Proliferate does not target, so permanents with shroud or hexproof can still be chosen and will recieve additional counters.
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