No.
There are cards in the duel decks that are not standard tournament legal.
The official ruling on the Nexus of Fate card in the current Magic: The Gathering tournament format is that it is banned in Standard and Historic formats, but legal in other formats like Commander.
The legal Magic: The Gathering sets for tournament play are determined by the format of the tournament. The most commonly played formats are Standard, Modern, Legacy, and Vintage. Each format has a specific list of sets that are legal for use in deck construction. It is important to check the official Magic: The Gathering website or tournament guidelines for the most up-to-date information on legal sets for each format.
Single Elimination
As of the latest tournament results, the top decks in Magic: The Gathering Standard block format include Mono-White Aggro, Sultai Ramp, and Dimir Rogues. These decks have been performing well in competitive play and are popular choices among players.
It is already in standard format.
Yes, core sets are legal in the Standard format.
No, the World Cup does not use a sudden death format to determine the winner of the tournament. Instead, it follows a knockout stage format where teams are eliminated after losing a match until a champion is crowned.
Which standard format? There has got to be over 10,000 of them.
LG DARE does texts with the standard format, not chat format
The basic SOP format is derived from the standard memorandum format.
Freezeout is the standard poker tournament format. It means that once you've lost all of your chips you are out of the tournament. Some tournaments offer a re-buy or add-on which gives you an additional way to get chips. These tournaments are then not freezeout, though at some point they do revert to freezeout format.
There is no standard 'format' command in Unix.