212.6b A player may play only one land card during each of his or her own turns. Effects may allow the playing of additional lands; playing an additional land in this way doesn’t prevent a player from taking the normal action of playing a land. Players can’t begin to play a land that an effect prohibits from being played. As a player plays a land, he or she announces whether he or she is using the once-per-turn action of playing a land. If not, he or she specifies which effect is allowing the additional land play. Effects may also allow you to “put” lands into play. This isn’t the same as “playing a land” and doesn’t count as the player’s one land played during his or her turn.

212.6c Land subtypes are always a single word and are listed after a long dash. Land subtypes are also called land types. Lands may have multiple subtypes.

Example: “Basic Land – Mountain” means the card is a land with the Mountain subtype.

212.6d The basic land types are Plains, Island, Swamp, Mountain, and Forest. If an object uses the words “basic land type,” it’s referring to one of these subtypes. A land with a basic land type has an intrinsic ability to produce colored mana. (See rule 406, “Mana Abilities.”) The land is treated as if its text box included, “{T}: Add [mana symbol] to your mana pool,” even if the text box doesn’t actually contain text or the card has no text box. Plains produce white mana; Islands, blue; Swamps, black; Mountains, red; and Forests, green.

212.6e If an effect changes a land’s type to one or more of the basic land types, the land no longer has its old land type. It loses all abilities generated from its rules text and its old land types, and it gains the appropriate mana ability for each new basic land type. Note that this doesn’t remove any abilities that were granted to the land by other effects. Changing a land’s subtype doesn’t add or remove any types (such as creature) or supertypes (such as basic, legendary, and snow) the land may have. If a land gains one or more land types in addition to its own, it keeps its land types and rules text, and it gains the new land types and mana abilities.

212.6f Any land with the supertype “basic” is a basic land. Any land that doesn’t have this supertype is a nonbasic land.

212.6g If an object is both a land and another type, it can be played only as a land. It can’t be played as a spell.

212.7. Sorceries

212.7a A player may play a sorcery card from his or her hand during a main phase of his or her turn, when he or she has priority and the stack is empty. Playing a sorcery as a spell uses the stack. (See rule 409, “Playing Spells and Activated Abilities.”)

212.7b When a sorcery spell resolves, the actions stated in its rules text are followed. Then it’s put into its owner’s graveyard.

212.7c Sorcery subtypes are always single words and are listed after a long dash: “Sorcery – Arcane.” Each word after the dash is a separate subtype. Sorcery subtypes are also called sorcery types. A sorcery subtype that’s also an instant subtype is also called a spell type. Sorceries may have multiple subtypes.

212.7d Sorceries can’t come into play. If a sorcery would come into play, it remains in its previous zone instead.

212.7e If a spell, ability, or effect states that a player can do something only “any time he or she could play a sorcery,” it means only that the player must have priority, it must be during the main phase of his or her turn, and the stack must be empty. The player doesn’t need to have a sorcery he or she could actually play.

213. Spells

213.1. Every nonland card is a spell while it’s being played (see rule 409, “Playing Spells and Activated Abilities”) and while it’s on the stack. Once it’s played, a card remains a spell until it resolves, is countered, or otherwise leaves the stack. For more information, see rule 401, “Spells on the Stack.”

213.1a A nonexistent mana cost can’t be paid.

213.2. A spell’s type, supertype, and subtype are the same as those of its card.

213.3. The term “spell” is used to refer to a card while it’s on the stack. The term “card” isn’t used to refer to a card that’s on the stack as a spell. It’s only used to refer to a card that’s not in play or on the stack, such as a creature card in a player’s hand.

213.4. Every spell has a controller. By default, a spell’s controller is the player who played it.

213.5. If an effect changes any characteristics of a spell that becomes a permanent, the effect continues to apply to the permanent when the spell resolves.

Example: If an effect changes a black creature spell to white, the creature is white when it comes into play and remains white for the duration of the effect changing its color.

214. Permanents

214.1. A permanent is a card or token in play. Permanents stay in play unless moved to another zone by an effect or rule. There are four types of permanents: artifacts, creatures, enchantments, and lands. Instant and sorcery cards can’t come into play.

214.2. Permanent type is the type of a card or token that’s in play. A nontoken permanent’s types, supertypes, and subtypes are the same as those printed on its card. A token’s types, supertypes, and subtypes are set by the spell or ability that created it.

214.3. A card or token becomes a permanent when it comes into play and it stops being a permanent when it leaves play. Permanents come into play untapped. The term “permanent” is used to refer to a card or token while it’s in play. The term “card” isn’t typically used to refer to a card that’s in play as a permanent; rather, it’s nearly always used to refer to a card that’s not in play and not on the stack, such as a creature card in a player’s hand. For more information, see rule 217, “Zones.”

214.4. Every permanent has a controller. By default, a permanent’s controller is the player who put it into play.

214.5. Every permanent has a value in each of three status categories: tapped/untapped, flipped/unflipped, and face up/face down. By default, a permanent comes into play untapped, unflipped, and face up. For more information, see rule 510, “Status.”

215. This section is now empty. See rule 205.4c and rule 420.5e about legendary permanents.
216. Tokens

216.1. Some effects put token creatures into play. A token is controlled by whomever put it into play and owned by the controller of the spell or ability that created it. The spell or ability may define any number of characteristics for the token. A token doesn’t have any characteristics not defined by the spell or ability that created it. The spell or ability that creates the token sets both its name and its creature type. If the spell or ability doesn’t specify the name of the token, its name is the same as its creature type(s). A “Goblin Scout creature token,” for example, is named “Goblin Scout” and has the creature subtypes Goblin and Scout. Once a token is in play, changing its name doesn’t change its creature type, and vice versa.