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How Deepfakes Tore a High School Apart The Oldest Evidence of Animal Sex Has Been Found, and It’s Mind-Boggling Township Leader Resigns in Tears Over OpenAI Data Center Death Threats After Town Bans Flock, Councilmember Crashes Out, Proposes Internet and Phone Ban Podcast: Elites Just Don't Get AI Streamer Realtime Deepfakes Himself into Mr. Beast, Says He Loves 'Touching Little Boys' Lawyer for Guy Who Sued Women Who Called Him ‘Psycho’ Caught Using AI The FBI Wants to Buy Nationwide Access to License Plate Readers Researchers Wanted Preschool Teachers to Wear Cameras to Train AI Podcast: The Physical Politics of the Internet with Britt Paris Scientists Discover Strange New Crystal Formed by Nuclear Blast Tech Companies to Discuss Iran's Future During 'Private Conference' at Uber HQ ArXiv to Ban Researchers for a Year if They Submit AI Slop Behind the Blog: New Music and a Crash Out Mayo Clinic is Using AI to Listen to Emergency Room Visits DOGE Cuts Unleashed a Deadly Wave of Violence Across Africa, Study Finds Internet of Shit: AI Poop Analysis App Offered to Sell Me Database of Its Users' Poops At Least We Know the Washington Post Isn't Buying Views War and Data Centers Are Driving Up the Cost of Fiber-Optic Cable Software Developers Say AI Is Rotting Their Brains Podcast: The Chinese Deepfake Software Powering Scams ICE Agents Have List of 20 Million People on Their iPhones Thanks to Palantir How the World Became a Casino Your AI Use Is Breaking My Brain Students Boo Commencement Speaker After She Calls AI the ‘Next Industrial Revolution’ Scientists Studied 906 Mafia Marriages and Found Something Surprising University Claims Withholding Water From Nuclear Weapons Data Center Is 'Unlawfully Discriminatory' to Data Centers Behind the Blog: Storage Woes and RSS 'The Biggest Student Data Privacy Disaster in History': Canvas Hack Shows the Danger of Centralized EdTech ICE Plans to Develop Own Smart Glasses to ‘Supplement’ Its Facial Recognition App ‘HELLO BOSS’: Inside the Chinese Realtime Deepfake Software Powering Scams Around the World Scientists Gave ‘Aggressive’ Fish Psychedelic Drugs. 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This Archivist Has Saved 175,000 Articles from 30 Years of Writing about Magic: The Gathering
Matthew Gaul · 2026-05-21 · via 404 Media

I have been playing Magic: The Gathering on and off since I was a child and in that time I’ve read countless articles and websites about the game. Much of it is lost to time and internet churn. Sites are deleted and even the strongest hobby writing vanishes if it isn’t preserved. The Library of Leng is a website that’s attempting to do that preservation work.

Named after a Magic card, the Library of Leng is a new searchable database of writing about the card game. It pulled old usenet articles, hobbyist posts from old websites saved in the Internet Archive, and updates from publisher Wizards of the Coast that are routinely scrubbed from existence. The Library is hosting links to some of the first strategic writing about the game from 1994, just a year after it started, as well as announcements about tournament rules from just a few years ago.

The Library is the work of Gregor Stocks, a software engineer in Seattle. “I learned to play in elementary school with a couple of Fifth Edition boosters shuffled together, but I didn't really get into it until Mercadian Masques. I've played on and off since then,” Stocks told 404 Media.

“I'm interested in the strategic history of the game, and I've been frustrated a bunch of times over the years by not being able to find old articles that people mention were influential on their thinking,” Stocks said. “More broadly, I grew up on the internet in the early 2000s, and I worry that a lot of my big influences will disappear by default. The Internet Archive is great, but I worry about them being the only place where a lot of this stuff is saved.”

The Library doesn’t reprint articles in full without the express consent of the author. Instead it gives readers the headline, a small snippet, and a linkback to an archived version of the story on the Wayback Machine or Internet Archive. 

Stocks said the hardest part of the whole project was parsing old data from the early days of the internet. “Nowadays when you write about Magic you've probably got a content management system that stops you from making typos on the card names, formats your decklists nicely, keeps your HTML in the same format, etc,” he said. “Back in the 90s and early 2000s they didn't have that stuff, they were pretty much writing every webpage from scratch, so it takes a lot of spaghetti code to handle all the different cases and typos and parse authors/dates/links/etc correctly. There's still a lot of room for improvement there.”

According to Stocks, the response to the opening of the Library has been positive. Readers shared old articles they half-remembered but could not find and authors reached to have their work added. “Nobody's asked me to remove their writing from the index (though I'll happily do that if anybody asks), and it's been really gratifying to see big-time Magic pros tweeting about my project,” he said “I reached out to [Wizards of the Coast] to ask permission to host their old stuff, but they haven't responded yet. I'd be happily surprised if they said yes.”

Along the way, Stocks has also taken the time to enjoy some of the writing he’s worked to preserve. “It's hard to pick a favorite—I've been so zoomed-in on ‘am I extracting the metadata correctly?’ that it's been hard to zoom back out on ‘is this a good article?’ But I'd probably say ‘Who's The Beatdown’ (it's the standard answer for a reason), ‘Drafting the Hard Way,’  and then for a goofier example ‘What if the 4-Card Limit Was Abolished in Modern?’”

Despite all this good works, some of the written history of Magic remains absent in the Library of Leng. Though I’m referenced in a few places, my own contributions to the field of Magic: The Gathering journalism aren’t present.

Last week I was talking to a friend about “banding,” an obscure and little-used Magic ability. I recalled an ancient article from a magazine in the 1990s titled, I thought, something like “The Three Bitch Sisters of Magic” that discussed banding but I struggled to find it in the Internet Archive. Stuck in a hotel room for a work trip on a weekday night, I trawled through old issues of InQuest magazine hoping to find it. After some searching there it was: “The Three Bastard Sisters of Magic.” I’d misremembered “bastard” as “bitch.”

It was a scan of the old magazine uploaded to the Internet Archive. I asked Stocks if these old magazine articles would end up in the Library some day. “I didn't realize those were in the Internet Archive—that moves them from ‘probably never’ up to ‘maybe someday,’” he said. “Dealing with OCR is a lot hairier than parsing HTML, though.”

The article was written by a woman named Beth Moursund and, on a whim, I searched for her in the Library of Leng. I got 52 results, some of them written by Moursund but more referencing her. I learned from a 2011 article that as well as a feature writer, Moursund had worked for Wizards and been instrumental in the history of the development of Magic.

Learning about Moursund’s legacy after vaguely recollecting one of her features the 1990s was a bit like falling into a Wikipedia rabbit hole late at night. It would have never happened if not for the Library of Leng and Stocks’ efforts to preserve the written history of Magic: the Gathering.

About the author

Matthew Gault is a writer covering weird tech, nuclear war, and video games. He’s worked for Reuters, Motherboard, and the New York Times.

Matthew Gault