A total of 572 Magic: The Gathering cards are on the Reserve List, a list created by Wizards of the Coast that prevents reprints of specific cards from 18 early sets.
The creation of the Reserve List was viewed by most MTG collectors as a positive measure concept with its creation in 1996. The list was revised and a WotC made a newreprint policyin 2002. This left 572 Mythic Rare and Rare MTG cards on the Reserve List that will never get reprinted again unless the list is removed by Hasbro.
When you’re gaming on your iPhone 13, you could make some epic plays that you’ll just have to share with your friends. While you’ll always be able to tell what happened, screenshots will serve you better since you’ll be able to show exactly what happened and prove to your friends that you did, in fact, get a 10.0 KD/R on that one match.
Taking a screenshot on iPhone 13 isn’t that complicated, and you can do it by pressing and releasing the side Power/wake button and the volume up button at the same time.
Dragons are roaring into Teamfight Tactics for Set Seven Dragonlands, showcasing new traits, champions, Augments, Tacticians, battle pass, and more.
Patch 12.11 will drop TFT Set Seven on live servers June 7 or early June 8 depending on the region. The Dragonlands set showcases a new region within Runeterra beyond the convergence and a total of seven dragons, four of which are new to the League universe. In addition to dragons are new mechanics that feature a Treasure Dragon at Stage 4-7 and Draconic Augments (formerly Hextech Augments).
Grand Theft Auto V has maintained its spot as one of the most popular open-world games as thousands of players still enjoy exploring Los Santos and the surrounding areas. The map is full of interesting places to explore, which might be overwhelming for newer players. One place every player should check out is the army base in GTA V, called Fort Zancudo, which is exciting and dangerous.
Fort Zancudo is located at the base of Mount Josiah on the western coastline of the map.
Another online game inspired by the hugely popular puzzler Wordle has hit the airwaves, and this time it comes with a very specific spin—it’s decidedly Pokémon-themed.
The game is called Squirdle, appropriately enough, and it’s been developed by a Costa Rican software developer named Sergio Morales. Instead of guessing words, you guess Pokémon, and the game will point you in the right direction until you find the one it’s thinking of.