![]() Borderless Legendary Dragons and lands are #406-416. ![]() "Samurai frames" are #309-330, "Ninja frame" showcase cards are numbered #331-353, and "Soft Glow" showcase cards are #354-405. The two cards with Phyrexian frame and language are #307-308. Borderless planeswalkers are numbered #303-306. Alternate card frames have another card number than the original version. Each type has two different pieces of "block-stamped" art. The regular cards include 10 " Ukiyo-e" basic lands. Draft boosters include a guaranteed double-faced card in common or uncommon, with the rare or mythic DFC distributed as normal. Kamigawa: Neon Dynasty contains 302 regular cards (117 commons, 88 uncommons, 59 rares, 18 mythic rares, 20 basic lands) and includes randomly inserted premium versions of all cards. Half of the set features the newly mechanized world of modern Kamigawa, while the other half depicts the more traditional Kamigawa as seen in the earlier block. The central conflict of the set is the conflict between modernity and tradition - a metafictional reference to how R&D struggled to develop a sequel to one of the worst received blocks of Magic, separating it from the previous setting while making it recognizably the same plane. Several Japanese artists were engaged to produce card illustrations, among them famous manga artists like Tetsuo Hara. The setting of Neon Dynasty is described as Magic: The Gathering's first science fiction plane. 1.4.1 Beadle & Grimms Silver and Platinum Editions.
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