
Prime Number Mystery Is Key to ‘Magic: The Gathering' Card Game Strategy
A game of Magic: The Gathering begins well before players lay down their first card. As a collectible card game, Magic requires competitive players to select the optimal deck of cards based on how they think it will function against hypothetical opponents with many different strategies—then the game itself offers proof or disproof of the player's predictive powers. Because about 30,000 different cards are available today—though they're likely not all owned by a single individual—there are many degrees of variation.
This abundance of possibilities has sparked plenty of questions and ideas. Some players have wondered how complicated the game really is. For example, does it involve enough complexity to perform calculations, as you would with a computer? To this end, software engineer Alex Churchill and two other Magic players created a game situation in which the cards act as a universal computer —as a Turing machine. They posted their work to the preprint server arXiv.org in 2019.
Their computer model sealed the deal: Magic is the most complex type of game, they concluded. Theoretically, any kind of calculation that a computer can perform, a particular Magic game can do the same. Ever since I learned this, the game has held a certain fascination for me.
On supporting science journalism
If you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.
But in practice, of course, using a Magic deck for its calculating prowess is not particularly helpful. Coding such a Turing machine alone is extremely time-consuming. And who has the time to go one step further and go through the billions of different card combinations necessary to solve a math problem with Magic cards? The quicker option would be to type the problem into a computer through some elegant Python code (or another programming language).
As it turns out, people are quite willing to give their time to such 'Magical' endeavors. For example, in 2024 Churchill and mathematician Howe Choong Yin developed a Magic programming language that used Magic moves to code elementary calculations such as addition, multiplication or division. Say you wanted to calculate 3 + 5. All you would need are a few cards (such as Vaevictis Asmadi, the Dire), Churchill and Howe's instructions, and a little patience. Forget supercomputers, quantum computing and all that fancy stuff: the future of computing lies in Magic cards, right?
Probably not—even solving a division problem with Magic cards is cumbersome, and tackling more complex problems in this way proves to be nearly impossible, especially when it comes to dealing with open questions in mathematics. That hasn't stopped others from trying, however.
Gameplay with Twin Primes
In the fall of 2024 Reddit user its-summer-somewhere posted a combination of 14 moves that use about two dozen Magic cards and could potentially deal infinite damage. The outcome of the game depends on the answer to a mathematical puzzle that is almost 180 years old: Are there an infinite number of prime number twins? Prime numbers, such as 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, and so on, are divisible only by 1 and themselves. Twin primes are pairs of prime numbers that differ by only two, such as 3 and 5, 5 and 7, 11 and 13, and 17 and 19.
Mathematicians have previously proven that there are an infinite number of primes. But their number decreases with increasing size: the further you progress in the number line, the less often prime numbers appear. This is even more true for prime number twins. The question that mathematicians have been asking themselves for centuries is: Are there also an infinite number of twin primes? Or will this parade end at some point?
In 1849 French mathematician Alphonse de Polignac put forward the now famous twin prime conjecture: there are an infinite number of prime number twins. But despite numerous attempts, the assumption has so far neither been proven nor disproven. The largest known twin prime pair is 2,996,863,034,895 x 2 1,290,000 + 1 and 2,996,863,034,895 x 2 1,290,000 – 1. Is it perhaps the last?
A Mathematical Magic Card
Interest in prime numbers among Magic players increased with the introduction of the new card set Duskmourn: House of Horror on September 27, 2024. The deck contains, among other things, the card Zimone, All-Questioning. Its description reads: 'At the beginning of your end step, if a land entered the battlefield under your control this turn and you control a prime number of lands, create Primo, the Indivisible, a legendary 0/0 green and blue Fractal creature token, then put that many +1/+1 counters on it. (2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, and 31 are prime numbers.) '
That sounds cryptic, at least for Magic-inexperienced people like me. But the action of the card depends on the number of currency-generating cards called 'lands' that a player controls—specifically on whether that number is prime.
After its-summer-somewhere posted their complicated, and not particularly realistic, game situation, the outcome of which depends on whether there are an infinite number of prime twins, another Redditor promptly commented, 'Somehow I knew that introducing the concept of prime numbers into the game would be a bad idea. Good to know I'm not wrong.' ('To be fair,' responded a third user, 'prime numbers have always been in the game, as have non-prime numbers. [This set] just introduced the concept of that mattering.')
The idea, its-summer-somewhere wrote, is to create situations in which certain cards called 'creatures' can be copied as often as desired using a particular card combination. Another card ensures that the copied creatures function as lands. If the number of lands controlled is not prime, a certain combination of cards creates two more lands. As soon as the number of lands corresponds to a prime number p, however, Zimone comes into play: It then creates two new Primo creatures, which in turn automatically also become lands. This means that you now have p + 2 lands. If p + 2 is also a prime, Zimone's ability gets triggered again, leaving four Primo creatures on the battlefield. At that point you can use three of them to cause damage to the enemy. Thus, the opponent can only be harmed if Zimone is triggered twice in a row—in other words, only if the number of lands corresponds to a prime number twin. You can then repeat certain steps to increase your number of lands to the number of the next largest twin prime. The maximum damage that can be inflicted depends on the number of all existing twin primes: 'Our maximum damage is infinite, if and only if the twin primes conjecture is true,' its-summer-somewhere wrote.
Does this now bring humanity closer to a solution to the prime twin conjecture? Probably not. Sure, you could sit two people down and have them play Magic for ages. But ultimately the gameplay is based on knowing whether numbers are prime twins instead of explicitly proving the conjecture.
Regardless, the imagined game is always entertaining and bizarre—and apparently it tempts nonmathematicians to deal with problems related to number theory. It may also have the opposite effect: As a math fan, I've been looking for a new hobby for a long time. Maybe I should give Magic a try.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
Everything To Know About The Magic: The Gathering x Final Fantasy Pre-Release Events
Magic: the Gathering's Universes Beyond Final Fantasy set is almost upon us, with a scheduled release of June 13, 2025. However, if you simply can't wait to collect or play with all your favorite characters and creatures from the legendary RPG series, you are in luck as this weekend, local game stores across the country are running pre-release events. If you are a longtime Final Fantasy fan jumping into the popular TCG for the first time, this guide will tell you everything you need to know about the event! As the name implies, a Pre-Release is an event that shops will run usually the week before the release of an MtG set as a way to get cards into the hands of excited players before the full release. While different sets will have minor differences, in general attendees will receive a Pre-Release kit with a number of booster packs and some additional goodies. For example, the upcoming Final Fantasy Pre-Release comes with six booster packs, an exclusive spindown (MtG's 20-sided, spindown die used as a life counter), a deck box, and a traditional rare (or mythic rare) foil card. The Final Fantasy Pre-Releases start Friday, June 6 (with some stores choosing midnight events) and technically go through Thursday, June 12, however most stores will be running them this weekend. Read More: Everything You Need To Know To Get Into Magic: The Gathering's Final Fantasy Set Players will then be given a set amount of time to open the boosters and build a limited, 40-card deck using the cards from those packs. After that, you will play three games against other participants in a 'tournament'. The tournament is Swiss Style, which means you play against other people with your record, ie: if you lose in Game 1, you play against someone who also lost in Game 1, and if you lose that too, you would play someone who lost twice in Game 3. There is usually a winner who is given a small prize such as a booster pack or sleeves or something small, but most people are there just to play some games. Given the randomness of the boosters in each pre-release as well as the the structure of the tournament, Pre-Releases are pretty casual events which make them great for FF fans coming to Magic for the collaboration. As mentioned above, most local game stores that sell Magic: the Gathering products will be holding Final Fantasy Pre-Releases. The easiest way to find stores near you, is by downloading the 'Magic: the Gathering Companion' App. You can then navigate to the 'Locator' Tab and type in your zip code and you will see a list of all the events in the area (not just the Final Fantasy Pre-Releases), as well as their date and start time. Read More: How To Pick the Right Commander Deck For Magic: The Gathering's Final Fantasy Set Choosing one will also give you more info including additional store rules including how to sign up as well as the cost of the event. It's a good idea to check a couple different events that you are interested in since pricing will vary depending on the store. In my experience, it appears that most stores are charging between $45 and $60, but don't worry about paying less as the product received is exactly the same. Once you pick a specific time-slot, if sign-up rules weren't listed on the event page in the Companion app, give the store and call and ask how you can sign up! If you have never played a TCG and have limited deck-building experience, here are a couple rules to get you started: Open all your packs and sort your cards by color. An MnG deck usually has two colors, so pick the two colors you have the most cards in as this will generally give you the most options. If you get a particularly strong Mythic Rare in your box, it could also be worth choosing that as an option. Now, any Magic deck needs Mana, and a lot of it, so your deck should have between 17-18 'Land' Cards. I wouldn't recommend using the ones contained in your boosters, because each pack only contains one, so you will be short by a lot. Your store should provide lands, so just use theirs this way you don't get mixed up on which are yours and which are the stores. That only leaves 22-23 cards to pick from your boosters. Here is a good general breakdown for a well-balanced deck: 1 Cost Cards: One or Two 2 Cost Cards: Seven or Eight 3 Cost Cards: Five or Six 4 Cost Cards: Three or Four 5 Cost Cards: Two or Three 6 Cost Cards: At Most One These are just general guidelines, and these numbers can be flexible if you think of a strategy that will work well. For example, if you want a Rush Deck to flood the battlefield with low level creatures, you will probably want less 5 Cost Cards and more 2 or 3. Play around with what you think will work, or just pick cards you like! Once you have your 40 cards selected, you should sleeve them. This is to protect your cards, and it makes them a little easier to shuffle. Your store will definitely have sleeves on sales. Dragon Shield is a popular brand as they are very well-made, affordable and have a lot of cool color options, but most likely any sleeves will do. Your store may even have Final Fantasy Sleeves for sale! If you are at all curious about Magic: The Gathering, you should definitely attend a Pre-Release. They are great for newcomers, as people are excited to play with new cards and with no real prizes, most veterans won't try to build an overpowered deck. As an added bonus, given the excitement around the Final Fantasy set, there will probably be a lot of newcomers to the game too, so you won't be alone if you are unsure about specific rules or card abilities. You also know you already have something in common with everyone who is there. Who knows? Maybe you'll meet your next FFXIV Raid Group and have a new Friday Night Hangout. . For the latest news, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

Los Angeles Times
15 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
How do you get kicked off ‘Love Island' before the love begins? Yulissa Escobar shows us
Want to succeed in reality show love? It might be best to keep your public life free of racial slurs. 'Love Island USA' contestant Yulissa Escobar, whose use of the N-word on a couple of podcasts surfaced over the weekend before the show's rocky premiere Tuesday, was there and then gone in a heartbeat. A mere blip in love-competition TV's continuum of smokin' hot contestants. She used the N-word casually and naturally in conversation, per video posted on Reddit and TMZ. She did not appear to be using it with disparaging intent — but the word is still racist on its face. 'They're gonna get cancelled so bad and not like I care but they should be protecting them from mass cancellation like this by not casting them in the first place,' one Reddit user said. Plus, Escobar had been partnered on the show with contestant Ace Greene, who is Black. Here's how that selection went, according to Vulture: 'The last to choose is Yulissa. I get the sense that someone once called her a 'real firecracker' and she's been trying to live up to that ever since. She has clearly been waiting for an opportunity to cause trouble, so she aims her lips directly at Ace and they lock in. This goes on for a while.' Before 'Love Island USA' even premiered, fans and haters on social media were making plans to vote Escobar off as fast as they could. But the show beat them to it. 'Welcome back to 'Love Island USA,'' narrator Iain Stirling said 18 minutes into the second episode of Season 7, which streamed Wednesday. 'Yulissa has left the villa.' No other details were given. 'I can confirm Yulissa has left the villa,' a representative of the show told The Times on Thursday. No other details were given there either. So viewers are left to connect the dots on their own — but seriously, those are some pretty huge, flashing-neon dots. Nobody needs that kind of attention, right? At least nobody in the reality TV business does. The process to audition for 'Love Island USA' seems fairly intense, with applicants asked off the bat for their social media usernames and quizzed as to whether they have an OnlyFans page or have ever done porn (sorry, they call it 'Adult Film'). The casting company also wants to know whether prospects have ever cheated on anyone, the location and meaning of any tattoos, whether they have any celebrity friends and whether their parents are still together. There's also this: 'Is there any other information we should be made aware of concerning your application (including anything in your past that may attract negative press or publicity)? If YES, please provide details.' Looks as if Escobar didn't think her language was going to elicit negative publicity? But hey, Greene — who does have tattoos! — is now free to find fresh talent from among his remaining cast members. As for that rocky premiere, 'Love Island USA' fans got heated Tuesday when streamer Peacock posted on social media one minute after the planned showtime, 'WE GOT A TEXT! Tonight's episode will be slightly delayed. But it is worth the wait ... Stay tuned!' A full 40 minutes later, Season 7 got underway.


Gizmodo
15 hours ago
- Gizmodo
Reddit Sues Anthropic Over the Unlicensed Use of Its User Posts
It's well known that the AI industry rests on shaky legal ground. Companies like OpenAI have built their multi-billion-dollar businesses on the backs of vast tranches of training data, much of which is sourced from copyrighted content. The creators of that content know they're being ripped off and, more and more, it's leading to lawsuits. We got another reminder of this conundrum this week, when Reddit sued Anthropic over its use of Redditors' posts in its training data. Reddit's lawsuit, which was filed Wednesday, accuses the Amazon-backed AI company of breaching its user agreement. 'As far back as December 2021…Anthropic was already—without authorization and in direct violation of Reddit's User Agreement—training Claude on Reddit users' posts, the lawsuit claims. Anthropic, whose flagship product is the AI chatbot Claude, has tried to position itself as the 'good guy' of the AI industry—a company that plays by the rules and advances AI frameworks that are considerate of safety and ethical considerations. But, despite its 'white knight' PR, the company has repeatedly run into legal issues that throw its supposedly 'ethical' businesses practices into question. This week's litigation is yet another reminder of that. The lawsuit accuses Anthropic of unjustly enriching itself while also breaching the platform's user agreement. The suit claims that the AI company's bots have visited its website over 100,000 times since 2024. 'This case is about the two faces of Anthropic: the public face that attempts to ingratiate itself into the consumer's consciousness with claims of righteousness and respect for boundaries and the law, and the private face that ignores any rules that interfere with its attempts to further line its pockets,' the litigation states. It adds that Anthropic 'continues to publicly admit that it trains its Al technologies on Reddit content.' When reached for comment by Gizmodo, an Anthropic spokesperson provided the following statement: 'We disagree with Reddit's claims and will defend ourselves vigorously.' The war over AI content usage has become one of the industry's most prominent dilemmas. Platforms and artists are aware that their content is being pilfered for the sake of AI fuel, and they're firing up the lawsuit machine to fight back. At this point, OpenAI has been sued by so many different people and institutions that it's hard to keep track of it all—everyone from Sarah Silverman, Ta-Nahisi Coates, George R. R. Martin, and Jonathan Franzen, to the Center for Investigative Reporting, The Intercept, a variety of newspapers (including The Denver Post and the Chicago Tribune), and some YouTubers. The New York Times is currently suing the company on similar grounds. Reddit has sought to insulate itself from getting ripped off by developing contracts with AI companies that clearly stipulate an exchange of content for money. Last February, Reddit struck a deal with Google that allowed the tech giant to use the content on its platform as AI fodder, so long as the company coughed up $60 million a year. Not long afterward, a similar deal was struck with OpenAI. Anthropic doesn't seem to have gotten the memo, but it surely will now. More and more, it seems like this is the new model for the AI industry: To quote one of my favorite TV shows, you're going to have to pay the troll toll if you don't want to get pounded by a lawsuit. It's obviously a situation that favors large companies. AI companies with the resources will be able to buy access to large amounts of data to fuel their AI habits. Smaller, lesser-resourced firms will be shit out of luck.