Magic: The Gathering Drive to Work Podcast - #858: Vanity Cards
Episode Date: August 6, 2021In this podcast, I talk about what a vanity card is and walk through all the ones, that I could remember, in Magic. ...
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I'm not pulling on my driveway. We all know what that means. It's time for another Drive to Work, Coronavirus Edition.
Okay, so today I'm going to be talking all about vanity naming.
So, basically what vanity names are is when the name of a card or a character is named after something that's referencing
something that applies to a person who helped make the game or connected to a person who helped make the game
or connected to a person who helped make the game. But it's things that are named after real world
people. Now, vanity cards are something we stopped doing many years ago. I will get into that after
I talk about the vanity cards. I'll talk a little bit why we don't do vanity cards anymore.
But mostly what I wanted to do today is just sort of tell you about the vanity cards. I'll talk a little bit why we don't do vanity cards anymore. But mostly what I wanted to do today
is just sort of tell you
about some vanity cards
and share some stories
behind the vanity cards
or some fun stories
that go into the vanity cards.
Most of these cards,
the vast majority of them,
either were made
in the first five years
of Magic's life
or they're a term
that got made there
and then got reused later.
Because we don't...
Vanity names can get reused once they're sort of reused later. Because we don't... Vanity names
can get reused once they're sort of part of magic,
but we don't make any more vanity
names now. Okay, so
to start my story, I'm going to go
all the way back to Alpha.
So the first one I want to talk about
is Mons' Goblin Raiders.
Mons is
a goblin character that first shows up on that card.
I think Mons shows up... He shows up... The card that it's named after, Mons P a goblin character that first shows up on that card I think Mons shows up
he shows up
the card that it's named after
Mons Pachelik shows up
later
also in Unhinged we made Mons' goblin
waiters as a nod to that
Pachelik Mons
is the character
he showed up in
I think one of the
Modern Horizons sets I think where does he show up? Pachelik M He showed up in, I think, one of the Modern Horizons sets, I think.
Where does he show up?
Pashaluk Man shows up in Modern Horizons.
But anyway, Manz Johnson
is a friend of Richard Garfield's
and a longtime Wizards employee
who works at R&D.
So Manz loves goblins.
Loves, loves, loves goblins.
And so Richard decided to pay homage to his friend
by making one of the goblin cards in...
Alpha didn't actually have a lot of goblin cards.
I think it was only a handful of goblin cards.
But he decided to make one of the goblin cards a reference to Mons
because Mons loved goblins so much.
Okay, also in Alpha,
there's a card called Nevenrall's Disc.
So Nevenrall is the words Larry Niven spelled backwards.
Larry Niven is a writer that Richard Garfield likes.
And I think one of the...
The Nevenrall's Disc itself is kind of inspired by
some object in one of the Larry Niven stories
that I think that destroys everything.
So he was just kind of doing a riff off that.
And because it was sort of a nod to Larry Niven,
he named the card after Larry Niven.
The funny thing is
Nevin Rall has now become a character
in Magic, and so
we have
Nevin Rall
showed up in Nevin Rall, Ur Nevenrall showed up in, um, Nevenrall Urborg Tyrant showed up in Commander
Legend.
So, uh, Nevenrall is, uh, just a part of magic lore.
Um, but yeah, yeah, that, so that was just, uh, uh, as you'll see, a lot of these nanny
cards are just, whoever names them, they're, they're, it's a nod to something that inspired
it or, uh, something related to them.
Okay, next up in Alpha,
Jam Day Tome.
So, Jam Day Tome
is an artifact
that taps for mana.
I'm sorry, it taps to draw a card.
And
it was named
after, so it's like
four mana, four tap, draw a card.
It was named after J.'s like four mana, four tap, draw card. It was named after
J. Michael Davis.
Mike Davis is famous
for a couple things. One of the things he's most famous for
is he was a good friend of Richard's.
He's the one that convinced Richard
and went with Richard
to pitch RoboRally,
a game of Richard's, to
Wizards of the Coast.
Obviously, Wizards of the Coast ended up not being able to make RoboRally
because it was too expensive a game for them to make.
But Peter Atkinson, who was the CEO of Wizards, said,
here's the kind of game we could make.
Here's the resources we could make.
We could make a game, for example, on cards.
And that inspired Richard to go back and come back with Magic.
Mike was the head of Magic R&D for a while.
And, in fact, he was the head of R&D when I got hired.
He was the person who hired me.
So Mike was the person who brought me into Wizards at full time as an employee.
Anyway, Mike has sadly died, but he has an important role in the history of magic, and
Richard wanted to make Nod his friend in in Alpha, so J.M.D.
Tome was made to be a Nod. Now, that started a little tradition. There's a few follow-ups to that.
So, in Antiquities, there's J.L.M. Tome, or J.L.M. Tome. That is a reference to Joel L. Mick.
Joel was the co-lead designer of Mirage and Visions. He actually was on the
Antiquities design team.
The East Coast Playtexters designed it, but Joel
actually joined them. So Scaffoli, Jim Lynn,
Dave Petty, Chris Page
designed Antiquities, but Joel Mick actually
joined them to design it.
Anyway, the card is a reference to him. We later
in
Unhinged made a card called
Gelem Grifter, which was also a reference to Joel.
He, in fact, posed for the art.
So there's two different Jalem references to Joel Mick.
The third tome we made was in Tempest.
Emesee Tome.
Um, so MSC Tome, uh, was, uh, or MSE Tome, um, was another reference, uh, to a magic designer.
This time, um, Michael S. Elliott.
So Mike Elliott, who you guys might know of, I had him on my podcast.
Um, he is a longtime, uh, designer.
And this was the first set that he worked on, was Emacy Tome.
And we decided to give him the same sort of... Like, all the tomes were named after game designers.
So Emacy Tome, which is four mana, five in tap, draw two cards, and discard a card,
was named after Michael.
So all three of our tomes were referencing different designers.
Okay, I think that's all the ones in Alpha.
I'm loosely going in a rough order here,
but I'm jumping around a little bit,
so I apologize if I go a little bit out of order.
Next, I want to talk about Arabian Nights.
So Arabian Nights has a bunch of...
Richard had to make the card,
and I think Richard named the cards.
One of the things nowadays is
the people who make the cards, people who name the cards. One of the things nowadays is the people who make the
cards, people who name the cards, usually they're
a different set of people. I mean,
sometimes InDesign will name a card in the name sticks,
but usually there's a naming
team that goes through and usually renames a lot
of the cards. But Arabian
Knights, the story behind Arabian Knights, real quick, is
Magic came out,
they had printed what they thought was a six-month supply,
sold out in a couple weeks, then they made Beta, which they thought a six-month supply, sold out in a couple weeks.
Then they made Beta, which they thought was another six-month
supply, sold out in a week.
And so they realized that Magic, there was a
hungry audience there. They did
work to get out Unlimited, which came out
in December, I think, of that year, 93.
But they also said to Richard, okay, we've got to get an expansion
out. And so Richard very quickly
put together an expansion, which was
Arabian Nights. And I both have done
a series of podcasts on Arabian Nights.
I did a series of podcasts with Richard Garfield talking
about Arabian Nights. So if you're interested in Arabian Nights,
I've done a whole bunch of podcasts on it.
But anyway,
in Arabian Nights, there's a bunch of cards where Richard
is just... because Richard had to make the cards quickly
and he got to name them, so there's just a lot of
references to people he knows in Arabian
Nights. So first up is Wailuli Wolf,
which is a little common wolf.
Or actually, I think it was...
Was it rare?
Wailuli Wolf was this little tiny wolf
that ended up getting reprinted later.
I think in Arabian Nights...
Was it a rare in Arabian Nights?
No, it was a common...
Oh, I see. Right.
Wailuli Wolf's one of those weird cards
where it is shown up in both common and rare. I think it was common originally in Arabian Nights? No, it was a common rare. Oh, I see. Right. White Lily Wolf's one of those weird cards where it is shown up in both common and rare.
I think it was common originally in Arabian Nights,
and then when it got reprinted later on,
like in 6th edition, it's a rare.
In 5th edition, it's a rare.
So, anyway, there's not a lot of cards in Magical
that are both common and rare.
There's some.
A bunch being Arabian Nights commons
that later came back as rare.
Anyway, White Lily Wolf is an anagram of Lily Wu.
That was the maiden name of Richard's first wife.
And so he named the card after her.
Next is If Biff Afrit.
So If Biff Afrit...
Let's see.
If Biff Afrit is a creature from... it's two green green, three three flying,
and you can spend one green mana to do one damage to every creature that's flying and every player,
but any player can activate it.
So if Biffafreet was named after Richard's, well, okay, here's the story.
Richard has an older sister named Elizabeth.
When Richard was little, he couldn't say Elizabeth's name.
It was too hard to pronounce.
So when he was little, he called her Ifbif.
That's how he said Elizabeth.
So when he made a card as a sort of a nod to his sister,
he called it Ifbif, so Ifbif Afrid, as a nod to his sister.
So that was a reference.
I think a lot of...
There are a bunch of gins and a freets
that Richard named after different people.
Another one is Ernim Jim.
Ernim is an anagram of Herman.
And so Ernim Jim is, in fact,
a card that we reprinted a bunch of times.
How do you spell Urnum Djinn?
So Urnum Djinn is
three and a green for four or five.
At the beginning of your upkeep,
target non-wall creature on opponent controls
gains force walk until your next upkeep.
So the idea is it's a very powerful green card,
at least powerful at the time,
but since you probably were playing force,
it gives one of your opponents force walk. Although you can be clever and try not to play force. So the idea is it's a very powerful green card. It's powerful at the time. But since you probably were playing Forest,
it gives one of your opponents a Forest Walk.
Although you can be clever and try not to play Forest.
Anyway, Earnham was named after Herman.
Herman is Elizabeth's husband.
Next is Idwin Afrit and Mijay Jin.
Idwin Afrit costs red, red, red.
It's a 3-6.
Whenever you're attacked, flip a coin.
If you lose the flip, Idwinafreet can't block this turn.
And then Mijajin is kind of the opposite.
Mijajin is red, red, red, 6-3.
It's a jinn, obviously.
Whenever Mijajin attacks, flip a coin.
If you lose the flip, remove Mijajin from combat and tap it.
So one's a 3-6 that you have to flip to block,
and one's a 6-3, they have to flip to attack.
So Idwin is an anagram for Windy,
and Mijin is an anagram for Jamie.
Windy and Jamie got married sometime around Arabian Nights happening.
There was a wedding, and as sort of a nod to them,
he named cards after them.
I think those are the Arabian Night cards that I know that are named after specific people.
There are a whole bunch of Rabindite cards where Richard's sort of riffing after things from,
you know, the Rabindites and stuff, but those are the ones that are specific actual vanity cards.
Okay, next up, let me talk about the Weatherlight Saga. So here's a few cards that were named by Michael Ryan and myself.
So Michael Ryan and I created the Weatherlight Saga.
I've had numerous podcasts talking about it.
I've had Michael on for numerous podcasts talking about it.
So if you're interested to hear more about me and Michael making it,
there's numerous things to listen to.
So we had to make a lot of characters.
In fact, every single character in the story we named.
Most of them were just cool names that we thought was fun.
A few of them were riffs off words and things.
But a couple of them, four of them in fact, were actually named after something pre-existing.
So first up is El Adomri.
He's Lord of Leaves.
He's the King of the Elves.
So El Adomri is Irma Dale, spelled
backwards. Irma
is Michael's mother, and Dale
is his stepfather.
And he wanted to make a nod
to them, because they're his parents.
And so he ended up...
The funny thing is, Michael pitched me the name.
What's interesting is, Michael didn't
tell me at first that this was the name.
And so he pitched me the name, and I remember, I'm like, oh, I like it, I like it, and I'm like, oh, maybe, maybe it
won't be Eladonri. Like, I was trying to change letters in it to make it sound slightly different,
and it's like, no, no, no, I want it to be Eladonri, and finally he said, look, it's my, you know, it's
Irma Dale, and I said, oh, okay. Once I understood what he was doing, I'm like, fine, that's fine,
but it's funny that before I knew, I was actually trying to tweak the name a little bit.
When Michael named his
mother, a card after his mother,
so I decided, I actually named a character
after my mom.
There has been a Vanguard card of it,
but I think Vanguard's the only card.
So Lena
Soltari Emissary,
she was named after my mom,
Lynn. Lynn is my mom.
So my mom spells her name L-Y-N-N-E.
But so Lynn is L-Y-N-A.
So the Lynn part is with a Y.
One day, one day I have to make a Lynn a card.
A, because it's a character we haven't made a card out of yet.
We did make a Vanguard card with her.
She grants creatures shadow because she herself is a shadow creature stuck in between worlds.
Um, okay, another character that we sort of named after somebody, although more accidentally than on purpose.
Uh, the character Oram, who's the healer of the Weatherlight crew.
Um, she was actually a pretty minor character early on, but we knew we needed a healer.
And we liked the idea of having a Samite healer that felt very magic-y.
And we didn't know what to call her, so I just put down Oram, A-R-A-M, which was this Maro backwards, as a filler that wasn't intended to be her name.
But one of the things you have to be careful of in creative when you name things, people get attached to names.
And at some point, we're like, oh, we kind of like Oram.
So we changed A to I to kind of hide that it was Maro backwards.
But that's where that name came from.
Another one was there's an angel
named Selenia. Selenia Dark Angel.
So Selenia Dark Angel
is three white
black for a three three. Legendary creature
angel, flying, pay two life, return
Selenia Dark Angel to its owner's hand.
Anyway, Selenia interestingly was named after Michael Ryan's, return Selina Dark Angel to its owner's hand. Anyway, Selina
interestingly was named after Michael Ryan's
cat, Selina.
And Selina the cat was
named after a character that Michael
had played in a role-playing game.
So Selina has
two references, both Michael's cat and
Michael's character. Obviously they're
tied together. But his cat
and character was Selina, not Selina. Obviously, they're tied together. But his character was, his cat and character was Selina,
not Selina. Oh,
by the way, I don't think Michael played Selina.
I think somebody, someone
Michael knew played Selina. But anyway,
it was something that the cat got named after, and then
the character got named after.
Okay, next up
is Leshrac.
So in Ice Age,
there was a card called Minion of Leshrac, and there's some other, Leshrac's right, Leshrac's single, Herod of Leshrac. So in Ice Age, there was a card called Minion of Leshrac,
and there's some other, Leshrac's right,
Leshrac's single, Herod of Leshrac.
So Leshrac is the middle name
of Chris Page.
Charles is his name.
So Leshrac is the anagram of Charles,
so it's a nod to Chris Page. I just had Chris Page
recently on a podcast talking about Ice Age,
so if you want to meet Chris Page
and learn more about who he is, I just had him on. You can go listen to that. But anyway, that was
just a nod to Chris and his middle name, Charles. Okay, next up, Talim Tor. This is from Mirage.
Okay, so the story is Mirage had a whole bunch of designers, Bill Rose, Joel Mick, Charlie Cattino,
a whole bunch of designers, Bill Rose,
Joel Mick, Charlie Coutinho,
Don Felice,
Elliot Siegel,
Howard Kallenberg, I think those were the six people that designed Mirage and Visions.
Anyway, one of them, Elliot Siegel,
they were playing one day,
they were playtesting or whatever, and
Elliot's
references, there's a
football player named William
the Refrigerator Perry, who played
for Chicago, I believe. And so he was just commenting on how they should have cool nicknames
like William the Refrigerator Perry. And so somebody, I'm not sure who, said, okay, Mr.
Toilet. And that became a nickname for Elliot, said, Okay, Mr. Toilet.
And that became a nickname for Elliot,
that he was Elliot Mr. Toilet Seagull.
And it just became a running joke with them, with that group.
So when they were making the set,
they decided, they took Mr. Toilet and they anagrammed it.
So Mr. Toilet anagrams to Talimtor.
So there's Talimtor's darts, Talimtor's edict,
and then Talimtor himself.
But anyway, the character there was just them having fun.
Okay, next up.
Another person from Mirage, a card named after them.
So there's a guy named Don Felice, who's one of the designers of Mirage.
So Don was friends with the East Coast Playtafters,
Scaf, Jim, Dave, Chris,
and so they had made a card named after him in antiquities.
It was called Felden's Ice Cone was the name of the card.
You all might know it better as Felden's Cane,
which is a pretty famous card.
It's a zero-cost artifact that you can shuffle your graveyard into your library. Or, sorry, shuffle
your graveyard
into your library. It ended up
seeing a lot of play in early Magic.
Anyway, I don't know why the ice
cone became a cane. I don't know whether
the art came back and it was a cane, or
the people who just thought
that an ice cone wasn't as cool as a cane.
But anyway, Felzin's ice cone became a cane.
So Don lost his reference.
So they ended up making Deluf's
cone. The same team
made Fallen Empires, the East Coast
playtester. So they ended up making a different
card for Don Feliz called Deluf's
cone. A little less familiar
than Felzin's cane, sadly, for Don.ice called Deleth's Cone. A little less familiar than Felton's Cane,
sadly, for Don. But Deleth's
Cone costs zero.
Tap, sacrifice it. If target creature
you control attacks and is not blocked, you may
choose to gain its power and life. If you do so,
it deals no damage to opponent this turn. So you can
trade. Instead of doing damage, you can gain
life. Not a particularly powerful card.
But it is referenced.
It is named after Don
Felice. Okay.
Next up.
Okay, so there was an editor
named Darla.
Darla was the lead editor
of Magic. The first
lead editor of Magic was Beverly.
And then the second lead editor was Darla.
And then Mike Ryan, who was
my co-creator, was the lead editor for a little while. And then I think eventually was Darla, and then Mike Ryan, who was my co-creator,
was the lead editor for a little while,
and then I think eventually Del took over,
and Del now has been lead editor forever.
But anyway, Darla did a lot of the flavor text for Ice Age,
and there's two things she did,
two references she made.
One was the character of Jaya Ballard, who originally was just a character in flavor text.
Obviously, she later became a planeswalker.
We made a legendary creature in Time Spiral of her.
We made multiple planeswalker cards of her.
There are other cards referencing her.
She's been in infant flavor text.
So her last name is Ballard.
So the reason she's named Jaya Ballard is Ballard is
where I believe
Darla lived. Ballard is a city
in Seattle.
And I don't
know why she named her Ballard.
Most of the names in the set are very
Scandinavian. Ballard isn't really, but I mean Jaya is, named her Bowerd. Most of the names in the set are very Scandinavian.
Bowerd isn't really, but...
I mean, Jaya is, but Bowerd isn't.
So anyway, that's where Jaya Bowerd got her name,
named after Darla's...
I think it's where Darla lived.
Another character that Darla named then
was a character named Anna Kennerud.
Anna Kennerud was a Keldoran Sky Ranger, I think.
Anyway, it was a character
that got referenced a lot.
I don't think the character
appeared in a card name,
but there's a lot of flavor text
that references her.
Kennerud was...
Darla is now Darla Kennerud
because she was dating a man
who that was his last name,
and she ended up marrying him.
And so Kennerud... I think at the time she named it,
they weren't yet engaged, so he just was her boyfriend.
But she did use Ken Arood as a last name in flavor text.
Okay, another reference.
A Darkar Sentinel, a Darkar Unicorn,
and a Darkar Waste, which are all in Ice Age.
I believe Aditya Adarkar was a friend of Skaf,
and I believe he just thought it was a cool name,
and it sounded cool to Skaff,
so he just named some characters after it.
Just a friend of Skaff's.
Once again, Ice Age, for those who don't remember,
Ice Age, when Richard first made Magic,
he had his playtest teams all design expansions that he felt like one day
maybe we'll need it. So the East Coast playtesters made
Ice Age. Joel and
his group made Mirage.
Barry Reich ended up making Spectral Chaos.
Elements of that got used in Invasion.
So anyway,
a lot of these names go way
way back to early Magic.
Next up, in Homelands, way back to early magic. Okay, next up.
In Homelands, we get a couple references.
Okay, so Joven, both of Joven's ferrets, Joven's tools, and just Joven,
was a nickname of Kyle Namvar.
Kyle Namvar, he and Scott Hungerford were the two designers of Fallen Empires.
And so Joven was just a reference, a nickname reference to Kyle.
And then also they made Rysorian Badger.
Rysorian Badger was
another Homeland Guard. Rysorian Badger
is a reference to Raius.
Raius Hall,
who was a longtime employee at
Wizards.
Raius might have had a badger?
I'm trying to think whether or not that, like,
I don't 100% know this. My guess is that Raius might have had a badger. I'm trying to think whether or not that, like... I don't 100% know this.
My guess is that Raius might have had a badger,
and this is making reference to Raius' badger.
Now, it might have been a real badger.
Maybe it was a stuffed badger.
I don't know, but I think she had a badger.
Anyway, that's the best I know of that one.
Okay, and the final one that I know is a reference,
and I will say that I think this is a pretty exhaustive list.
I'm sure I'm missing something.
But this is all the ones that I...
Oh, did I even talk Morrow?
Okay, let me talk about this last one,
then I'll talk about Morrow.
I just realized I missed the big one.
I missed the one that was me.
I'll tell that story in a second.
I almost did a Vanity Card episode and didn't mention Morrow. That is ironic. Okay, the last one I'll tell that story in a second. I almost did a vanity card episode
and didn't mention Marrow.
That is ironic.
Okay, the last one
I'll talk about
before I get to Marrow
is Timbermare,
which was in
Planter Chaos.
Let me tell you
Timbermare.
It is three and a green
for five, five.
Has haste,
echo, five, green.
Beginning of your upkeep,
if this came under
your control since
beginning of your
last upkeep,
sacrifice it unless you pay its Echo cost.
When Timberlare comes into play,
tap all other creatures.
So Timbermare, interestingly,
was a green version of a red card.
What's the card called?
Hold on.
I will tell you in a second.
It was a red card.
What was it called?
Oh, Thundermare.
Thundermare. Thundermare.
So it basically was...
Sorry, it was similar to Thundermare.
Thundermare was five red for five, five haste
when it comes and taps all the creatures
originally from...
Oh, first from Portal,
and then in Weatherlight,
interestingly enough.
And it was a riff on that card,
so it wasn't exactly that card.
It was kind of that card plus Echo, I guess,
because that card was quite strong.
Anyway,
this was
by the way, interestingly, during
Portal Chaos, when haste wasn't a
green thing, but we imagined a world
where haste was a green thing. Ironically,
years later, haste became a green thing.
So, maybe a nod toward the future.
Anyway, this was a sad vanity card.
There's a man named Jamie Wakefield,
who in the early days of Magic was a very prolific writer,
wrote a lot about Magic,
much beloved member of the community.
His wife, her name was Mare, sadly died of cancer.
And this card was kind of a nod to Jamie's loss
and to Mare, to remembering Mare.
I know she loved horses.
And anyway, the flavor text and the name
and the art and everything was a nod to Mare.
So anyway, a little nod.
So let me get into a little happier story than that.
The story of Morrow. So I me get into a little happier story than that. The story of Maro.
So I had designed... So Maro is
an elemental,
a star-star elemental.
Ironically,
when we first printed it,
it was in nature spirit.
Now it's just an elemental.
So it's two green-green, star-star.
Maro's power and toughness are each equal to the
number of cards in your hand.
I had made that card,
and I was in a design meeting for Mirage,
sorry, a development meeting for Mirage.
We made a hole at Green Rare, and I
said, oh, I got a card for it. And everyone liked
it, so they put it in. And at the time,
the way our email system
worked was, you could type in certain letters
that would fill it in
if the letters you type were unique.
And so Bill had figured out for me
that if he typed in M-A-R-O
that it recognized it was me
and it would populate with my name.
So that's what he typed whenever.
So he just put M-A-R-O
because that was his little code
that Mark made this card.
It wasn't really Bill's intent
that it became the name of the card,
but it kind of stuck
and we got used to it and the creative team was like, okay, sure. became the name of the card, but it kind of stuck and we got used to it, and the creative team
was like, okay, sure. And then once
it came out, it became sort of, obviously, my
namesake. That's what people call me.
So it is a reference to me.
And
one of the things about Vanity Cards is
the Vanity Card effects, once they exist
in Magic, they're sort of
grandfathered in. So Maro is a creature
type in Magic. I mean, it's a creature in Magic. Not a creature type. It's a creature in Magic. They're sort of grandfathered in. So Marrow is a creature type in magic. I mean, it's a creature in magic.
Not a creature type. It's a creature in magic. And so
Multani is a Marrow, and Molimo
is a Marrow, and there's a cycle of Marrows
in Champion's Block. And anyway, there's been
a bunch of different Marrows. So it's just
kind of part of magic now. It's kind of fun
that that is a little nod to me.
I do appreciate, now that we
can't generate new Vanity Cards, I guess I
appreciate the one Vanity Card I got way back when.
But anyway, I will say this.
As somebody who's the benefit of a vanity card,
it is super fun to be part of the game.
So let me get, before I end today,
why did we stop doing vanity cards?
I will say, personally, I like vanity cards.
But the problem with them is that they become a little extra personal.
Like, one of the things when you're making a card set, you kind of have to, there's some
ego separation that has to happen.
Like, you're trying to make the best card you can.
And what we found was when people started getting things named after them, like, hey,
if the card's named after you, hey, you want it to be a decent card.
And so, like, it just created weird incentives for people.
And we decided that just it was a bad idea.
And so many years ago, we said, you know what?
Let's just, vanity cards, it makes bad incentives.
It makes hurt feelings.
Let's just stop doing it.
So we made a conscious decision to stop doing vanity cards.
Oh, I realized, by the way, there's one
last vanity card that I completely forgot
that I'm going to
I should mention. So in
Unhinged, I made a
card called Richard Garfield PhD,
which is literally Richard
Garfield. And ironically,
I think that is the last
vanity card that we made. I think the rule
for vanity cards, I think I got special permission to card that we made. I think the rule for vanity cards...
I think I got special permission to make a Richard Garfield card
when they made Unhinge.
So ironically, I think Richard Garfield PhD
might be the last vanity card,
which is probably apropos since Richard started it all.
And if you didn't know,
literally it's Richard's picture on the card.
I mean, it's Richard's name, Richard's picture.
And we did the PhD thing didn't know that literally it's Richard's picture on the card. I mean, it's Richard's name, Richard's picture. And
we did the PhD thing because
the same reason that it's Garfield
PhD on Feldergrif.
Anyway,
that, my friends, is
in great detail. Oh,
the one thing I did forget, the one other
thing where there is vanity, and then the one
thing we still do,
I started the Magic Invitational
many years ago. The winner
of the Invitational got to make a Magic card.
Because the very
first card that got made, which was Darwin, which ironically
was for the second Invitational, not the first,
I was in charge of card concepting.
I asked him to put his picture on it, and that
just became a thing.
So for all the Magic Invitational cards,
the cards were designed, or some were designed
by the player. We would help them.
But the picture always appeared on it.
Then the Magic Invitational stopped. That went away.
We recently decided a couple years ago
that the World Champion...
We designed the card. They don't design the card.
But we decided to bring back putting them on the card.
And so, for example,
Paulo just got his image on a card
in Strixhaven. So we do do that. So that is a vanity thing, I guess, Paulo just got his image on a card in Strixhaven.
So we do do that.
So that is a vanity thing, I guess, that we do do.
If you win the World Championship,
you get your image on a card.
So we do do that.
So I guess vanity's not completely dead.
You just gotta win the Magic World Championship
in order to get there.
So anyway, guys, I hope this was enjoyable.
I hope you had fun.
This was, like I said,
I was trying to go deep in depth. Looking at my notes, I hope this was enjoyable. I hope you had fun. This was, like I said, I was trying to go deep in depth.
Looking at my notes, I think I covered
everything.
It was fun looking back. There's a lot, I mean,
because
the Van Der Kerk cards happened so early that I
have a lot of association with a lot of these. So,
anyway, it was fun reminiscing.
But, anyway, that is today. So,
I can see my desk. So, we all know what that means.
It means it's the end of my drive to work.
Instead of talking magic, it's time for me to be making magic.
So anyway, I hope you guys enjoyed today's show.
And I'll see you all next time.
Bye-bye.