Magicthegathering.com

Magicthegathering.com
Web address http://www.wizards.com/magic
http://www.wizards.com/magic/Magazine/Default.aspx
Commercial? Yes
Type of site
Magazine / Official news
Registration Optional
Owner Wizards of the Coast
Created by Various
Launched January 1, 2002

Magicthegathering.com is the official website of Wizards of the Coast to promote and offer information on their trading card game Magic: The Gathering. It was started in January 2002 to act as Wizards of the Coast's official mouthpiece for information on Magic and to act as a replacement for The Duelist, a magazine covering Magic formerly published by Wizards of the Coast. The site was reworked in 2008 as a general introduction to Magic, with the online magazine aspect moved to a "Daily MTG" section. The magazine was generally referred to as Magicthegathering.com before the redesign.

History

The site was first started in 2002 with 5 columns, one for each day of the week. Mark Rosewater decided it would be best to bookend the week with the "behind the scenes" columns, and hence placed the Design column on Monday and the Development column on Friday. There was also one Featured Article per week, written by a variety of guest columnists. A Saturday column in Saturday School was added later. The site also became the main clearing house for more mundane and static information concerning Magic, such as beginner guides, lists of cards in each set, and the formal rules of Magic.

In February 2004, the Magicthegathering.com website was combined with columns from The Sideboard and the Magic Online site, which had previously been semi-independent. Some additional columns were added as well, increasing the number of articles per week from 6 to 11 (though some of the columns had merely moved). In 2007, the number of columns per week was reduced to 10 and then 9 with the discontinuation of a Saturday column and the Magic Online-based column.

The site is known for hiring popular writers from Magic fansites, and offered an avenue to employment with Wizards of the Coast.

On August 4, 2007, Scott Johns announced in the last Magic Academy article that sometime in 2008, the site would be redesigned to take "maximum advantage of what the web is capable of".[1] This was complete in 2008, with the aspects aimed toward explaining and selling the game toward newcomers placed at the fore of the website. The magazine elements were moved to the "Daily MTG" tab.

Columns

Magicthegathering.com currently publishes 10 articles per week; two daily columns on each weekday, with a Feature Article instead of a regular column on Monday. The Feature Article is written by a variety of authors picked by the editor. On an erratic schedule, information on recent tournaments is added to the tournament section, and information related to Magic: The Gathering Online can appear on a subsite devoted to Magic Online.

Former columns

Gatherer

Gatherer, launched on September 23, 2004, is an online database hosted at Magicthegathering.com that could be used to search for and sort data about the cards in Magic. Prior to Gatherer, official resources for card data on the company's website were limited to text-only "Oracle" lists, sortable lists of the cards in individual sets, and a comprehensive collection of card images that could only be looked up individually by name. Gatherer was preceded by several unofficial databases and search utilities, which were created and run by independent enthusiasts.

Gatherer was created by Doug Beyer, a web developer for Wizards of the Coast. The graphics decorating its interface were created by artist Jen Page.

There is a new version of Gatherer in the works. Simply called New Gatherer at this time, it contains more open-ended search features and a more efficient interface. It is currently in beta, which it has been in since the 2008 site redesign.[7]

Other features

Four minor features fill out the Magicthegathering.com page that are updated each weekday. These are the Card of the Day, which features a selected Magic card along with a short anecdote to go with it; Magic Arcana, which shows artwork or other odd design stories; Ask Wizards, which is a mailbag in which various employees answer questions; and Ask the Pro, a mailbag column where a professional Magic player (currently Raphaël Lévy, preceded by Olivier Ruel) responds to questions.

The site also features a Tournament Center, a subsite for live Grand Prix and Pro Tour coverage, a tournament schedule, player statistics, a "Judge Column" and other tournament-relevant information. This is the only part of the site that is updated more than once a day and on weekends (provided a tournament is taking place). Tournament coverage usually consists of a frequently updated blog, with Pro Tours and World Championships additionally featuring video and podcast coverage.

Wizards of the Coast also has a Twitter feed, dedicated to Pro Tour coverage. The last significant update of this was in early March 2009.[8]

Notes and references

  1. Lessons Learned
  2. "Limited Information Archive". Retrieved 2009-03-21.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Trick Jarrett (February 25, 2012). "Perilous Realms and More". Retrieved 2012-10-15.
  4. Adam Styborski (April 3, 2013). "Step Up to the Mic". Retrieved 2014-04-08.
  5. Trick Jarrett (October 15, 2012). "Closed for Renovations". Retrieved 2012-10-15.
  6. Zvi Mowshowitz (April 25, 2006). "Systemic Thought". Retrieved 2007-08-20.
  7. "MtG New Gatherer". Retrieved 2009-03-21.
  8. "MtG Pro Tour Twitter Feed". Retrieved 2009-03-21.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, March 26, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.