"Current Errata: none". All is well. Nothing strange about the green blue card.

Flavor text!

Borders and image correct, but still the wrong artist credit ;)

."-Richard Garfield, Email to Dave Pettey, late 1993Arabian Nights turned out to be a wonderful expansion; not the least considering it had the shortest development time of any set, a development team of only four people, and a design team of one. There are many gems among the 78 different cards, and the stories are plentiful if you dig a little. Today, we dig.Serendib Efreet is awesome. It is so good it supports strategies on its own, and strong enough that you should look for reasonsto play it in blue decks, rather than look for reasons to play it. The card was actually banned in extended in 1995, as it is a bolt-proof moat-jumper for the cost of a Devouring Deep. It may not be as iconic as Juzam, but then again, what is? The card itself has a colorful history of reprints. The most famous color is probably green.With some educated guesswork (based on print runs of the known early sets combined with information from WotC News in The Duelist #3), we can estimate that there exists about six Serendibs with the image of Ifh-Biff Efreet for each one with the correct Anson Maddocks image (including the foreign editions). On that same note, only one in eight of the cards with the Ifh-Biff image are actually Ifh-Biffs, which makes its status as a "tribute card" a little off. Imagine if 87% of all the Avalanche Riders (Darwin Kastle's invitational card) would have the image of Sylvan Safekeeper (Olle Råde's invitational card). One might assume that the art of Ifh-Biff Efreet don't depict Richard Garfield's sister though, just as Erhnam Djinn probably don't depict her husband Herman, so it might not be as big a fuzz (Ifh-Biff was Richard's nickname for his sister as a child, and Erhnam is an anagram of Herman). The red djinn/efreet pair, Mijae Djinn and Ywden Efreet, are also anagrams of married friends of Garfield (Jamie and Wendy). But what is a Serendib then? Clearly an anagram of 'inbreeds', but that seems a little too crude to be the correct answer. Ignoring an obvious wikipedia check, our first clue comes from the French revised version of the card.It's been a few years and my French is rusty, but I would translate the flavor to something like "As I recall, the island of Serendib is 80 parasangs in length and 80 parasangs in width; and on the island is a mountain which is the highest in the world". So, an island in Asia with a big mountain. I'll give you a moment to guess.....No, I didn't get it either. It's Sri Lanka, formerly known as Ceylon by most, and Serendib in the Arab world. The "montagne qui était la plus haut de tout de la terre" line is a slight exaggeration. I assume that they refer to Mount Pedro, which according to wikipedia stands at a little over 2,500 meters (for any non-metric readers, that's about half a parasang). The quote in the flavor text is attributed to 1001 Arabian Nights, trad. Mardrus. It's from the sixth voyage of Sinbad, where he gets shipwrecked and ends up on Ceylon. It was supposedly a very nice place to visit, even for non-Sinbad travellers. The word 'serendipity' itself, meaning "fortunate happenstance", actually hails from the country's name. And after all, it is surprisingly sweet to play the Efreet :)White-bordered Serendibs with the correct image are pretty uncommon, at least when compared to those with the wrong image. The German and French versions are fairly cheap though, but even a fair price for an English wb Efreet with the original Arabian Night's picture is actually higher than the GDP per capita for Sri Lanka (well, actually higher than the GDP per capita for the majority of the world's countries). It is on the short-list for one of the most expensive magic cards in the world.This wb version was printed around July 1994, and was never intended to be released. An estimated 4 cases of the set containing this card was accidentally distributed in September 1994 and April 1995. These four cases would presumably contain around 10 copies of this card, which makes it astonishingly rare. There is a popular conspiracy theory stating that the total print run of this set was in fact about 120 million cards, but that almost all of them were burned at the printing company Carta Mundi due to the colors being too dark.So, there's some single-card history on Serendib Efreet. It's a sweet card with lots of history, and I'm starting to feel like building a monoblue suicide deck about now :)