Foreign Black Border (FBB): The Complete Guide
Some of the most visually striking Magic cards ever printed aren't from a special premium set or a collector's edition - they're foreign-language versions of Revised and Fourth Edition with black card borders. Foreign Black Border (FBB) is the collector's shorthand for these early non-English printings, and they occupy a unique and genuinely fascinating corner of Magic history.
If you've ever wanted a black-bordered dual land that isn't Alpha or Beta, this is where you look.
What is Foreign Black Border?
Foreign Black Border (FBB) is a collective term, not a single set. It covers the original non-English printings of Revised Edition and Fourth Edition - specifically the ones that came out of the press with black card borders instead of white ones.
The reason black borders matter so much in older Magic comes down to a decision Wizards made early on. From Unlimited Edition onwards, English core sets used white borders to distinguish reprints from the original black-bordered Alpha and Beta printings. When production expanded to other languages starting in 1994, the first printing of a set in a new language was typically produced with black borders - making it immediately identifiable as a first run.
Think of it like a first edition hardcover: same content, but produced differently, and prized accordingly.
Format check: FBB cards are legal in any format that permits their English counterparts - so Revised dual lands in any language are Legacy and Vintage legal, and the same applies to Fourth Edition cards in their respective formats.
Which languages are included?
Not every language got the same treatment, and the history here is a little uneven. Here's how it breaks down:
| Language | Black Bordered Set | Notes | |---|---|---| | French | Revised Edition | White bordered version also exists | | German | Revised Edition | White bordered version also exists | | Italian | Revised Edition | White bordered version also exists | | Japanese | Fourth Edition | White bordered version also exists | | Portuguese | Fourth Edition | White bordered version also exists | | Spanish | Fourth Edition | White bordered version also exists | | Chinese (Traditional) | Fourth Edition | Black bordered only | | Korean | Fourth Edition | Black bordered only | | Russian | Ninth Edition | Has the Ninth Edition expansion symbol | | Chinese (Simplified) | - | No black bordered release at all |
The French, German, and Italian black bordered cards are from Revised, because those languages were introduced to production before Revised went out of print. The later languages - Japanese, Portuguese, Spanish, Chinese (Traditional), and Korean - came along after Revised had already been replaced, so their first printings used Fourth Edition.
Russian is an interesting outlier: black bordered Russian cards do exist, but they carry the Ninth Edition expansion symbol, placing them in a much later era of production.
Chinese (Simplified) is the one gap in the story - it never received a black bordered printing at all.
Why collectors seek these out
The short answer is: black-bordered dual lands that aren't Alpha or Beta.
The ten original dual lands - Underground Sea, Tundra, Tropical Island, and their cycle-mates - were printed in Revised Edition. Alpha and Beta versions are extraordinarily expensive and genuinely scarce. Unlimited and Revised versions exist in larger quantities but have white borders, which many players and collectors find less aesthetically desirable.
The FBB Revised printings in French, German, and Italian are the only alternative for a player who wants to run black-bordered duals in a Legacy or Vintage deck without paying Alpha or Beta prices. They're still expensive - sometimes significantly so - but they represent a real option that simply doesn't exist elsewhere in the card pool.
Cards from FBB sets are generally priced at a premium compared to their white-bordered equivalents, and the dual lands in particular sit in a category of their own.
Notable misprints
The Spanish Fourth Edition black bordered printing is notable for two production errors that have become genuinely interesting collector curiosities.
Serra Angel was printed with the blue card frame and the artwork of Time Elemental, with the art incorrectly attributed to Douglas Shuler rather than the actual artist, Amy Weber. Remarkably, the mana cost and rules text on the card remained correct - so it's unmistakably Serra Angel in rules terms, wearing a completely different card's clothes.
Burrowing received a similarly strange treatment: it was printed with the frame and card art of Strip Mine, while keeping its correct name, mana cost, and rules text.
Both of these misprints are functionally correct cards - they're legal to play as the cards their text says they are - but visually they're something else entirely. That combination of correct rules text and wrong everything else makes them oddities that misprint collectors actively seek out.
How to identify FBB cards
The core rule is simple: a non-English Magic card with a black border and no expansion symbol is almost certainly an FBB card. The absence of an expansion symbol places it in the Revised or Fourth Edition era, since expansion symbols on core sets weren't introduced until later.
The exception is Russian, which does carry the Ninth Edition expansion symbol - so a black-bordered Russian card with an expansion symbol isn't an FBB Revised or Fourth Edition card.
It's also worth knowing that white-bordered versions of several of these sets exist. French, German, and Italian Revised all have both black and white bordered printings, as do Japanese, Portuguese, and Spanish Fourth Edition. The white bordered versions from these languages are, unfortunately, very difficult to distinguish from standard white-bordered Fourth Edition cards at a glance.
Set legacy
Foreign Black Border occupies a genuinely special place in Magic collecting. These cards represent the moment the game began its expansion into a global phenomenon - the first time players in France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and beyond could hold a card printed in their own language.
For competitive players, the FBB Revised dual lands remain one of the only routes to a fully black-bordered Legacy or Vintage mana base without spending Alpha or Beta money. For collectors, the combination of age, scarcity, and the occasional production oddity (like those Spanish misprints) makes them endlessly interesting.
Thirty years on, they're a reminder that Magic's early production history was wonderfully, sometimes chaotically, human - and that some of the most sought-after cards in the world are just Revised duals, printed in Italian, with a black border. ✨















