Welcome to the Official Magic: The Gathering Card Database!

You've found Gatherer! This page explains how to use the official Magic card database.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents What Is Gatherer?

Trading card games like the Magic: The Gathering TCG combine collectable cards with a strategy game. You don't know what you'll get in a Magic booster pack. You just start a collection and trade with other players to get the cards you want.

The best part about a trading card game is that it's always changing. You design and build your own unique decks, and each Magic game you play is different. New Magic expansions are released a few times a year, and each new expansion brings new ways to stupefy and defeat your opponents.

This is where Gatherer comes in handy. Because new cards are released all the time and old ones are constantly refined with new wordings in Oracle (the database that contains the official English text of every Magic card), you need a single source to get all of the information about a card. With this knowledge, you'll be able to build impressive decks that will put you one step ahead of your opponents.

If you'd like to learn more information about Magic: The Gathering, check out the official "What is Magic?" section on the Magic web site .

Table of Contents Searching Using the Simple Search

The home page for Gatherer is called the Simple Search. With the exception of some additional search criteria, it is the only thing displayed on the home page. However, the same Simple Search controls are available on every other Gatherer page. We wanted to make sure that you can easily search the database regardless of which page you are currently on.



The search controls on the Gatherer home page.

As you can see in the image above, the main search box allows you to enter in terms to search on. Depending on what options you select, different aspects of the cards will be searched. See the table below for an explanation of each option.

Group Option What's Searched Search Card Name If this checkbox is selected, the name of each card will be searched using the search terms. For example, if you enter "Fork" as the term you would like to search for, 3 cards would be returned: " Fork", " Forked Lightning", and " Forked-Branch Garami". This is the default option if no checkboxes are selected. Search Card Types Selecting this checkbox will ensure that the type line of each card is searched using the provided search terms. For example, if you enter "Goblin Shaman" as the terms you are searching for, and select only the Types checkbox, the search will return only Goblin Shaman cards, including Mad Auntie. Search Card Text This checkbox means that the rules text portions of each card are searched. As an example, entering "sacrifice two islands" will return "Floodgate", "Psychic Allergy", and "Leviathan". It's obvious why Leviathan is returned in this search, but perhaps not so obvious why Floodgate and Psychic Allergy are. The reason is that the phrase is searched for individual words. Surrounding the phrase in quotes — '"sacrifice two islands"' — ensures that only Leviathan and Psychic Allergy are returned as they both contain that exact phrase. Filter Card Color Mana Symbol You can filter what color cards are searched using the different mana symbol checkboxes. For example, searching Types for "goblin" and selecting the mana symbol checkbox will return goblins that have a in their mana cost. By default, this search is an "OR" search, meaning it will return any card that matches any of the provided terms. Filter Card Color Exclude unselected colors In some instances, you want to ensure that cards that only require the mana symbol type you selected in their mana cost. Selecting this checkbox means that any multi-color or hybrid cards (that contain colors not specified in your search) will not be returned. Filter Card Color Match exactly these colors Matching exactly the colors you specified means that only cards with the color you select will be returned. This is the same as an "AND" search using all of the terms you provided. Filter Card Format Format Name Certain cards are only playable in certain tournament formats. As a result, you can also narrow down your search by selecting a format from the drop down list. If you are looking for an addition to your Standard deck, just choose "Standard" from the select box. When you search, only cards from the Standard format will be returned.

The "Search Card" conditions are special in that they are present on every Gatherer page and are remembered from page-to-page. If your preference is to always search names and text, just check those two boxes and they will remained check throughout your stay on Gatherer.

There are some clever things you can do with search. Symbols like or are encoded into a "cost" in the text of cards using curly braces, so that {W}{W}, {T} becomes , .

The search box on each Gatherer page also will allow you to see cards, matched by name, as you type. You can enable or disable this feature based on your preference as well as change the way the results are grouped. For more information on changing the way the "Auto-Complete" box works, see the Settings section of this help document.



The auto-complete box provides results while you type.

Table of Contents Searching Using the Advanced Search

If the search you want to do is complicated and involves a number of interrelated conditions, then Advanced Search is the mode for you. When you use Advanced Search, you may specify any number of criteria that your search must match. To do this, you choose a field. Enter into that field's text box the value you want to search for, and then select the appropriate Boolean operator from the dropdown list. By default, various values are joined together with "and" (meaning all of them need to match) except for Sets, Blocks and Formats, which are joined together with "or" (meaning any of them can match).

When you are finished specifying the value, click the "Add" button to add that condition to your search. The Advanced Search page displays search terms grouped into filters. On the Advanced Search page, a filter is all of the conditions applying to a single part of a card. For example, if you specify "must contain goblin" and "must not contain soldier" for Subtypes, those two conditions define your Subtypes filter. Different terms within a filter can be joined together using Booleans in the way described above.

You can't specify a boolean operation (AND, OR or NOT) among different filters. Advanced Search always treats additional filters as more restrictive, so that two filters must both be satisfied for the card to be returned in the results. For example, you cannot specify "Format must be Standard OR Set must be Revised," because Advanced Search does not currently allow cross-filter operations like this.

Once you've done your search, you may decide that you want to go back to the Advanced Search page and refine your search. When you return to the search page, you can reload your previous search's filters by clicking "Load Previous" above the filter display area. If you decide you want to start afresh, click the "Delete All" link. You only have to "Delete All" if you were in the middle of configuring an Advanced Search but haven't performed it yet... if you return to the Advanced page later and add a new condition to the empty list of conditions (without clicking "Load Previous"), the new condition will overwrite your previous search automatically.

Table of Contents Numerical Filters

The filters under "Numerical Filters" on the Advanced Search page behave slightly differently than other filters, because they have a second dropdown list next to them for a comparison operator. In the case of CMC, Power and Toughness, these operators are for comparing numerical values to each other (e.g. greater than or equal to 5, or less than 3).

In the case of Mana Cost, the comparison operators available are slightly different, since Mana Cost is a set of symbols. You can do a "fuzzy" search, meaning the Mana Cost contains the provided value anywhere in it -- for example, "contains WU" (which would match and ). You can alternatively do an "exact" search, meaning the Mana Cost must match the provided value exactly -- for example, "is WU" (which would only match ).

In the case of these filters, the comparison operator is displayed next to each term, since each value you specify can have a different comparison operator associated with it.

Table of Contents Regular Expressions

One of the most powerful -- but also one of the most complex -- features of Gatherer is the ability to search any field using a regular expression. A regular expression is a special text string that defines a search pattern, and results in a "match" / "didn't match" answer. Although discussing the construction and usage of regular expression patterns is beyond the scope of this Help, here are a few tips to help you get started, and a few special features of Gatherer with respect to regular expressions.

You specify a regular expression by enclosing it in m/{pattern}/ , where {pattern} is your pattern. So, for example, to search the text field for the digit characters (0-9), you would specify text = m/\d+/ , meaning "match any card with 1 or more digit characters in its text box."

, where {pattern} is your pattern. So, for example, to search the text field for the digit characters (0-9), you would specify , meaning "match any card with 1 or more digit characters in its text box." You can specify field values for the current card using ::{field name}::. So, for example, to search the text field for the card's subtype, you would specify text = m/::subtype::/ , meaning "match any card whose subtype(s) are in its text box." The tilde (~) is an alias for ::name::.

, meaning "match any card whose subtype(s) are in its text box." The tilde (~) is an alias for ::name::. You can't put whitespace into your patterns, due to the restrictions on browser URLs (it converts spaces to other characters), so instead use the special character "\s," which matches any whitespace character. So, for example, to search for all cards that have three or more subtypes, you would specify subtype = m/.*\s.*\s.*/ , meaning "match any card whose subtypes two spaces between three sets of any number of characters."

You can learn more about regular expressions in general at the reference site Regular-Expressions.info.

Table of Contents Making Sense of the Search Results

Once you've formulated and performed your search, you need to be able to make sense of the results. The default search view contains a combination of a small version of the card image, the card details (name, type, rules text), the sets it was printed in, and the number of cards returned. For example, if you searched for Scarecrow typed cards, the first two results would look something like this:



As you can see from the image, different aspects of the card and attributes of the search are displayed.

Gatherer doesn't stop at just showing you a list of the cards returned within your result set; it also provides options to page through and sort the returned records.



You can sort the returned cards, and for large result sets, you can page through them.

At times it's helpful to sort the cards in a particular order. By default, they're returned sorted by name. However, you may want to see them in order of rarity or color weight. To add a sort to the results, just select the sort type from the "Additional Sort" select box and click "Add".

If you want to switch over to the visual or text spoiler view, click either the "Switch to Visual Spoiler" or "Switch to Text Spoiler" links. The "Standard" view is the default search result layout. In addition, there are two other views: a "Compact" view which shows no miniature card image, and puts all the relevant information into a single table row, and a "Checklist" view for collectors. All of these alternate views are sortable just as the "Standard" view is.

Table of Contents Card Information

Once you've found the card you want to look at (either through the auto-complete or search results) and click on its name or image, you are taken to pages with all of the information about the card. These following sections describe what is contained on each page.

Table of Contents The Core Card Details

The card details page contains all of the card attributes including rules text (Oracle and as printed), mana cost (as well as converted mana cost), rarity, flavor text, power and toughness and artist information. In addition, the card image is shown. It's helpful for multi-part cards to rotate the card image using the rotate link. Finally, if there are any rulings on a specific card, they are shown below the card information (by default, they are hidden; click the "Display Rulings" link to epand them).



The card details page contains a lot of information about the card.

Although it's not shown on the image above, some cards were printed with multiple pieces of artwork within a set (basic lands, for example). You'll know that's the case when you view one of those cards because there will be numeric links to each other variation below the card image. Some cards may have these links but display the same artwork for each version. This just means we're missing that artwork for those variations at this time. Don't worry, though — one of our goals is to add these missing images in the very near future.

Another new feature of Gatherer is the linked set name and artist credit. If you click these links, you'll automatically be taken to the other cards in the set or to the other cards illustrated by that artist.

After you've examined all of the core card information, notice that along the top of the box there are additional "tabs" to other aspects of the card.



The links to more information about the card you're viewing.

Table of Contents Set & Legality Information

Many classic cards have been printed in several different sets. When you switch over to the "Sets & Legality" tab, you will get a list of each set the card appears in. Below the set table is another table containg what tournament formats the card can be played in. Sometimes a card may be banned from a format in which it would otherwise be legal, or playable in such a format but restricted to only one copy per deck. The status of those cards will also be listed in the format legality table.

Table of Contents Card Languages

Many Magic cards have also been printed in different languages. The Languages tab will show you the different languages the card was printed in for the set you are looking at. For example, the Alpha version of "Clone" was not printed in any other language besides English. But, if you switch to the Tenth Edition version of Clone, you'll see that Gatherer has translations for 9 different languages.

Table of Contents Discussing the Card

There are a lot of things to be said about each Magic card. The Discussion tab is the place to do it. On this page, you can rate the card, submit a post discussing the card, and rate other posts, as well as see what other players thought about the card. However, you must create a Wizards.com Account (the same as your forums account) to partake in the discussion.

Table of Contents Community Levels

If you click on a user's Wizards.com personality name you can see different statistics about their Gatherer community contributions. The table below lists the different levels you can achieve when you rate cards, comment on cards, and have your comments evaluated.

Symbol Level Requirements # of Rated Cards # of Cards Comments # of Rated Comments Average # of Ratings Per Comment Land 0 - 100 0 - 100 0 - 100 0 - 10 Common 100 - 1000 100 - 1000 100 - 1000 10 - 100 Uncommon 1000 - 2000 1000 - 2000 1000 - 2000 100 - 500 Rare 2000 - 5000 2000 - 5000 2000 - 5000 500 - 1000 Mythic 5000+ 5000+ 5000+ 2000+

Each rating means something different. The " # of Rated Cards" corresponds number of cards you've rated on the card discussion page. Similarly, the " # of Card Comments" corresponds to the number of cards you commented on, also on the card discussion page. There is also a level for " # of Rated Comments", which is how many other people's comments you rate. Finally, there is also a level for " Average # of Ratings Per Comment" which is the average number of ratings your comments get.

Table of Contents What to Discuss?

The Discussion porition of the tab is not designed to be used like the forums. For threaded discussions of Magic cards in general, head to the forums. We recommend you share stories and strategies you've experienced while playing with the particular card in question. For example, magicthegathering.com editor Kelly Digges recently discussed his favorite Magic card:

"There are lots of cards I like. I love Sliver Queen because it's the first card whose art ever made me feel tiny. I love Mindslaver because it has probably my favorite line of text on a Magic card ever. And I love Reaper King for its unapologetic five-color, "twuberg," artifact-gold frame, "harvest time" wackiness.



But if you're talking about specific cards, I'd have to say it's the Revised Edition Shivan Dragon I opened the first time I ever bought Magic cards. I bought a 60-card starter and two boosters, but I don't remember which order I opened them or which one Shivan Dragon was in. Anyway, it's one of the first 90 cards I ever owned, and although it may not be all that rare or sought-after, it's very dear to me.



Are there stronger cards? Sure. Cards with better art? Definitely. But that particular copy of Shivan Dragon marks the moment when I fell totally in love with Magic. In fact, that very card now hangs on my cube wall, to remind me why I work on this web site every day."



–Kelly Digges, Wizards Asks

We think that strategies and combos using the card will be the most valuable topics. How could you resist sharing the last time you smashed your opponent with your favorite card? It goes without saying, but keep your comments on-topic and respectful.

Table of Contents Where can I find the comments and ratings sections?

Comments and ratings have been temporarily disabled on Gatherer. But fear not, these features will return and you’ll be able to give every Ouphe five stars again before you know it.

Table of Contents Formatting Tips

In order to keep the formatting of the Gatherer comments simple and effective only a few different options are supported. We would rather the content of the comment be the most interesting aspect of the post. As such, only valid markup tags are allowed and no posts with un-closed tags can be submitted. The following formatting tags are allowed:



Tag Description [b] [/b] This tag will make a word or letter bold. [i] [/i] This tag will make a word or letter italic. [u] [/u] This tag will underline a word or letter. [autocard] [/autocard] This tag will create an autocard style link that can be used to link to other Magic cards. It can be used by surrounding a card name with the tag, e.g.: [autocard]Fork[/autocard] or by adding a multiverse id attribute to it, e.g.: [autocard multiverseid="200"]My favorite version of Fork.[/autocard] or by adding the name attribute to it, e.g.: [autocard name="Fork"]I love fork[/autocard]. [Mana Symbol] This tag will create a mana symbol to be displayed inside your post text, e.g. [u] would create a blue mana symbol. For hybrid mana, surround it by parenthesis, e.g.: [(2/u)].

The different tags can be used in combination with each other. For example,



"[b][autocard]Mad Auntie[/autocard][/b] is the best card to have in a [b]goblin[/b] deck."



would turn out like:



" Mad Auntie is the best card to have in goblin deck."

Table of Contents Terms of Use

Using the Community features of Gatherer means that you must obey the Terms of Use that apply to all of the different Wizards Community web sites. Specifically, keep in mind that:



Your comments must be respectful.

Your comments may be deleted at any time for any reason.

We're all here to have fun and enjoy the game of Magic. If you keep that in mind, the Gatherer community will flourish and be a valuable resource for Magic players of all skill levels.

It's helpful to report abusive, offensive, and/or posts in violation of the terms of use to our customer help system. If you report a post, our customer service team will review it, delete it if necessary, and take appropriate action against the poster if needed.

Table of Contents Exclamation Point

You may see an exclamation point after submitting your card rating or post. This is usually due to the fact that there is a two-second delay imposed between each community operation you do, or the text of the comment you entered has a validation problem (usually just an unclosed tag).

Table of Contents Settings

There are some aspects of Gatherer that we felt players might want to customize based on their preferences. As such, we store some of these preferences in a cookie on your browser so that we can customize your Gatherer experience from visit to visit.

In the settings page, you can specify how your search results behave and are displayed. The auto-complete can be disabled from showing cards as you type in the search box based off of your input. Additionally, you can disable the hint text, change the way the cards are grouped (or not grouped), and tell Gatherer what to do when you select one of the cards from the auto-complete menu.

The current settings Gatherer supports are:

Setting Description Default Results View This setting will allow you to specify which results view you want to be the default for searches you do. The default is the Standard results view, which has a small card image and most of the card's fields present. Other options are Compact - which mimics the previous version of Gatherer and shows the results in a compact tabular view - and Text Spoiler - which is a long list of plain-text card results.

Results Per Page This setting will allow you to specify how many records should show up per page on search results. The default value is 100 per page. (Please be aware that if you specify "No Limit," your browser may experience slow response times from searches with large result sets due to the amount of data it needs to display!)

Card Link Action This setting will allow you to specify what happens when you bring up a Card Details page from clicking a card in search results. The default value is Same Window, which means it will replace the search results window (or tab). If you specify New Window, your browser will create a popup window in which to display the card. If you specify Recycled New Window, your browser will use the same popup for each card you display in this way.

Card Image Hover This setting will allow you to enable a card image bubble on results views that do not display the card image. The default value is disabled.

Auto-Complete Status This setting will allow you to turn off the auto-complete feature of the site-wide search box. The default value is enabled. All of the following settings are dependent on the auto-complete feature being enabled. The (even if name field checked) setting will allow you to enable the auto-complete feature even if you are not, by default, searching the "name" property of cards. This means that you can have the auto-complete enabled, but it will disable itself if you are not searching by card names. The default value is disabled (unchecked).

Hint Text This settings controls the text that is displayed in the line below each card in the auto-complete listing. You may choose to not show the hint text. This setting is enabled by default.

Group By You may choose to group the cards in the auto-complete drop down by their color or their type line. In English, the Oracle type line is used. However, in other languages, only the printed type is currently translated. As such, it is the type that is used.

Selecting a Card When you select a card in the auto-complete, either by using the arrow keys or the mouse, you may choose to populate the search box or navigate directly to that card. The default value for this setting is navigates to the card record. As a convenience, you can also specify your Language Preferrence from the Settings page.

Table of Contents Browser Tips

Modern web browsers these days have built-in ways for you to search different search engines. For example, Firefox and Internet Explorer 7 both have separate search boxes in the upper right hand corner of their window that allow you to search different sites. These can be used for searching the new version of Gatherer as well. Here are instructions for searching Gatherer with different browsers:

Table of Contents Firefox

If you would like to add Gatherer to the list of search engines in the upper right corner of Firefox, follow these instructions:

If you would like to make a "search keyword" for Gatherer, follow these instructions:

A "search keyword" is a quick search you can do from the main Firefox address bar. Firefox provides an automated way to do this by right-clicking on search boxes and clicking "Add a Keyword for this Search…". However, to add one for Gatherer, go to your bookmarks menu and right-click in the folder you want to add the search to and click "New Bookmark": In the dialog box that comes up, enter the following values: Where "Name" is the name of the bookmark as it will appear in your bookmarks menu, "Keyword" is what you will type first in the address bar when you want to do a search, and "Location:" is the search you would like to perform. Change the "Location:" field based on what you would like to search: Card Name:



http://gatherer.wizards.com/pages/search/default.aspx?name=+["%s"]



Card Name, Type:



http://gatherer.wizards.com/pages/search/default.aspx?name=+["%s"]||type=+["%s"]||subtype=+["%s"]



Card Name, Type, Text:



http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Search/Default.aspx?name=+["%s"]||type=+["%s"]||subtype=+["%s"]||text=+["%s"] The idea here is that you can use any Gatherer search that you're able to perform and substitute in the search terms into the query. For example, if you wanted to just search artist you can go to the Advanced Search page, and do an artist search. The search string would look like: http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Search/Default.aspx?action=advanced&artist= +["artistnameyoutypedin"] Then, just substitute the " artistnameyoutypedin" with the "%s" value and you have your automatic search. Now, you can try out your new search by typing the keyword and search terms into the address bar:

Which should automatically perform the search for you and take you to the results page.

Table of Contents Internet Explorer

If you would like to add Gatherer to the list of search engines in the upper right corner of Internet Explorer 7+, follow these instructions:

Click on the little drop down next to the search button and select "Find More Providers…": On the webpage that that option takes you to, fill in the following information for the "Create Your Own" section: URL:



http://gatherer.wizards.com/pages/search/default.aspx?name=+["TEST"]



Name: Gatherer Where, same as for Firefox, the URL is customized to the search you would like to make. If you wanted the same name, type, and text search, the URL would look like this: http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Search/Default.aspx?name=+["TEST"]||type=+["TEST"]||subtype=+["TEST"]||text=+["TEST"] When finished, click "Install". You can customize your search providers through the "Change Search Defaults" menu option on the menu of step 1.

Internet Explorer 8 has the same setup steps as Internet Explorer 7 with the exception that the location of the "Create your own Search Provider" URL is now: http://www.ieaddons.com/en/createsearch.aspx.

Table of Contents Other Browsers

You should be able to apply the same patterns as Firefox and Internet Explorer to other web browsers such as Google Chrome and Opera.