Culturally offensive

From Magic the Archiving
Revision as of 02:44, 30 April 2024 by AntiTcb (talk | contribs) (1 revision imported)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Some Magic: The Gathering cards have been banned from sanctioned play due to being deemed racially or culturally offensive in the contemporary perspective.[1][2] This happened in 2020, in the wake of the George Floyd protests.

Description[edit]

From the Tournament Rules (May 29, 2023—March of the Machine)

  • 6.6 Legacy Format Deck Construction
    The following cards are banned in Legacy tournaments:
    • Cards whose art, text, name, or combination thereof that are racially or culturally offensive are banned in all formats. This list is a work in progress.

The cards show up in Gatherer with the following warning: We have removed this card image from our database because it has racist or culturally offensive art, text, or a combination thereof. Racism and cultural insensitivity are unacceptable and have no place in our games, or anywhere.[3]

Banned cards[edit]

Card name Set Release
<c>Cleanse</c> Legends 1994
<c>Crusade</c> Alpha 1993
<c>Invoke Prejudice</c> Legends 1994
<c>Imprison</c> Legends 1994
<c>Jihad</c> Arabian Nights 1993
<c>Pradesh Gypsies</c> Legends 1994
<c>Stone-Throwing Devils</c> Arabian Nights 1993

Other cards[edit]

When the Lost Legends were distributed via Dominaria United all cards by Harold McNeill were withheld. In addition, <c set="LEG" number="" title="Barbary Apes" artist="">Barbary Apes</c>, <c set="LEG" number="" title="Craw Giant" artist="">Craw Giant</c>, <c set="LEG" number="" title="Gwendlyn Di Corci" artist="">Gwendlyn Di Corci</c> and <c set="LEG" number="" title="Pyrotechnics" artist="">Pyrotechnics</c> were deemed unsuitable for redistribution due to their depictions or flavor texts.[4]

When the 30th Anniversary Edition of Beta was released in 2022, <c>Earthbind</c> and <c>Weakness</c> were removed from the card list, because they "didn't meet modern standards".[5]

Additional changes[edit]

In 2023, R&D reviewed its stance towards several terms and types in the light of cultural and religious sensitivity.[6] The decision was made to rename the keyword ability "Totem armor" to Umbra armor. This change was implied because Totems are considered sacred objects or symbols that serve as an emblem of certain groups of people.

In a similar vein, "Kindred" replaced "Tribal" as a card type (while "Typal" already had replaced the tribal theme). This came about because the word “tribal” has some unintended connotations.[7] At the same time, Rakshasa lost the cat-type to reflect their Hindu origin (as opposed to the Dungeons & Dragons influence).[8][9]

Meanwhile, Druid and particularly Shaman are also under consideration for a reboot, because these have connections to modern-day religions.[10][11]

References[edit]