Is the foil legal in Magic: The Gathering?

Yes, official foil cards from Wizards of the Coast are legal in sanctioned Magic: The Gathering formats, as long as they aren't warped or identifiable as marked cards, meaning you can't tell them apart from non-foils in the deck by feel or sight when shuffled. Different foiling treatments, like gilded foils, are also legal, but excessive curling or damage that makes them distinguishable from non-foils can get them banned by a judge, who might require a proxy for that game, notes Reddit users.
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Is foil etched legal in Magic: The Gathering?

The foil is slightly raised from the card surface and has a highly reflective gold finish. This embossing is smooth and legal for play in sanctioned Magic tournaments.
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Can any MTG card be foil?

in sets after 1999 every regular card in a set came in foil unless there is some error I don't know about. It this current era of booster fun there may be so cards that come only in foil and there are commander cards that may not get a foil treatment.
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How to tell if a MTG card is foil?

To tell if a Magic: The Gathering card is foil, look for a shiny, reflective surface with a rainbow sheen (traditional foil) or a textured, granular look (etched foil), often with a small star symbol in the set code area on newer cards; alternatively, check the bottom-left corner for a star icon, which signifies a foil version, especially for cards from recent sets.
 
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Are foil cards worth more?

Yes, foil cards are generally worth more than their non-foil counterparts due to scarcity and collector demand, often costing 1.5x to 2x, or even much more, especially for older or popular cards in games like Magic: The Gathering (MTG), though newer releases with more foils can dilute value, and some foils may even cost less if they're over-printed or curl badly. Their higher value comes from being rarer and more visually appealing ("bling") for collectors, but they can have playability issues like glare and curling, making non-foils better for competitive budget players.
 
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All Foil Variants in MTG Explained with Actual Cards | Magic MTG Arena | tapandsac.com

Is foil or holographic better?

If you have intricate and detailed artwork, holographic foil allows you to showcase those details with its depth and color-shifting capabilities. Conversely, traditional metallic foil is a better fit for simple and clean designs.
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How to tell if a magic card is a surge foil?

You tell a MTG surge foil by its distinct, diagonal, wavy/streaky pattern (like water ripples or lava), its unique higher collector number than the regular version, and its appearance in specific Collector Boosters (like Final Fantasy), often described as more "alive" or iridescent than standard foils, notes Reddit and TCGplayer.
 
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Are foils more expensive at MTG?

This appears to be more of the same. The newer set foils don't command too much of a premium over the non-foils, though the cool showcase treatment (in this case, alternate art borderless) is clearly in higher demand.
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What's the difference between holo and foil?

In trading cards, Holo (Holographic) refers to a shiny, color-shifting, rainbow effect often in the art box, while Foil is a broader term for any metallic sheen, including solid metallic colors or specific patterns (like reverse holo where the background is shiny, or textured foils), with holo being a type of foil, but the terms get used interchangeably, especially in games like Pokémon (holo) versus Magic: The Gathering (foil). The main difference is holo's shifting rainbow colors vs. simple shininess, though modern sets have many foil variations (cold foil, rainbow, sand glitter). 
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What's the difference between foil and foil etched?

Foil-etched cards (common in Magic: The Gathering) use a textured, often darker, metallic finish that highlights parts of the art or frame, while regular foils cover the entire card in a smoother, brighter, holographic sheen. The key difference: Etched is textured and selective, highlighting armor/details, while traditional is smooth and full-coverage, often with rainbow effects, but it also famously curls ("pringles"), which etched versions generally avoid. 
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What was the first magic set with foils?

The first Magic: The Gathering set to feature foils randomly inserted into booster packs was Urza's Legacy (1998), following the Urza's Saga prerelease promo, Lightning Dragon (1998). While early foils had border-only foiling (like the Urza's block), Eighth Edition (2003) introduced the modern full-card "traditional foil" with a rainbow effect, though Mirrodin (2003) popularized them in non-core sets. 
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Do MTG foils still curl?

However, foils are also prone to "curling," which is when a card begins to have one side flex outward while the other retracts inward. Foils can curl in either direction, folding inward toward the artwork of the card or folding outward toward the back of the card.
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What are the rules of foil?

The foil is a thrusting weapon only. Fencers can only score a hit by striking the point of their weapon on the defined target area of their opponent, which is limited to the torso only. Non-valid hits also stop the bout, but are not counted. The foil is governed by the rules of right of way.
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How to tell if a card is textured foil?

Foil-etched cards appear slightly matte and are a little less shiny on the foiled portions. They have a slightly textured finish compared with regular foils and, as a result, there is less glare reflected off the card. You will notice a metallic granular finish that looks as though it contains tiny metal specks.
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Are painted MTG cards legal?

If the art is still recognizable, the name and mana cost are not obstructed, and the card is not distinguishable from any other card in the deck while in a hidden zone (like the paint made it noticeably thicker), then it should be allowed.
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How much can you sell 1000 Magic cards for?

Typically between $5-$7 per 1k bulk uncommons and commons but here recently I've been selling some for $10 per 1k cards. It all depends on the buyer. Ok, I'm not used to buying bulk but figured I'd give it a shot today at a garage sale. Got roughly 9000 cards for $80 no basic lands.
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What is reverse foil called?

Reverse FOIL

The FOIL rule converts a product of two binomials into a sum of four (or fewer, if like terms are then combined) monomials. The reverse process is called factoring or factorization.
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What is the point of foil cards?

Foil cards are worth more to collectors or players that'd like to bling out their decks. So they tend to be more expensive, especially the soughtafter or meta-cards. They can be as much as double or tripple the price of a regular version. As for game value, they are the same as their non-foil counterparts.
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What are the disadvantages of foil?

Acidic ingredients: If acidic ingredients touch the foil, it may impart a metallic taste. Tears easily: Foil can easily rip during handling, becoming a risk. Single-use waste: Unlike silicone baking mats or biodegradable parchment paper, foil is non-biodegradable and not reusable.
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How do you tell if a card is a holofoil?

The distinction lies in what part of the card is foil. If only the image is foil, it's a regular holofoil. If the background is foil and the image isn't, it's a reverse holofoil.
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What is a rainbow foil?

Rainbow foil is another term for holographic foil or iridescent foil. When this foil refracts light, a gorgeous array of rainbow colours is cast. It's a beautiful foil that is ideal for capuring the 'eye' of your target audience when foil blocked onto printed media.
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