![]() Does my opponent still get the Hapatra trigger if they proliferate the -1/-1 counter?Ī: Yup, although they can't choose just to proliferate the -1/-1 counter. My opponent targets my Soldier with Grim Affliction and in response I activate Gavony Township's ability to put a +1/+1 counter on the Soldier. Q: I control a 1/1 Soldier token and my opponent controls Hapatra, Vizier of Poisons. Regardless of which of the two targets you'd change to Spellskite, the resulting set of targets would be illegal, so Spellskite's ability does nothing at all. When Spellskite's ability resolves, it can only change a target of Goblin Welder's ability if the resulting set of targets would be legal. Can I use Spellskite's ability to change the first target to Spellskite to make the ability fail?Ī: No, that doesn't work. Q: My opponent activates Goblin Welder's ability, targeting an artifact they control and an artifact card in their graveyard. If you win the coin flip, the ability copies the spell, using the spell's last-known information from when it was on the stack if it is no longer on the stack at the time. The ability doesn't target the spell, so it's not important whether or not the spell is still on the stack when the ability resolves. If I cast, say, Lightning Bolt and I lose the first coin flip, do I still get a second coin flip?Ī: Yup! Both instances of the "flip a coin and stuff happens" ability go on the stack and resolve independently, and each one does as much as it can. Q: I control Krark, the Thumbless and a Sakashima of a Thousand Faces that's copying Krark. Now you have two separate creatures that each have a +1/+1 counter on them. Undying triggers, and when it resolves, it returns each card to the battlefield with a +1/+1 counter on it. When it dies, one creature dies, but two creature cards arrive in the graveyard. What happens if it dies with no +1/+1 counter on it?Ī: Your Strangleroot Gemrazer is a single creature that's made up of two cards. Q: I control a Strangleroot Geist that has a Gemrazer mutated on top of it. Conversely, if your opponent played Underworld Breach first and you later play Yixlid Jailer, the cards in your opponent's graveyard would lose all abilities including escape. Yixlid Jailer's effect removes the abilities from the cards in your opponent's graveyard, and then Underworld Breach's gives them escape. Both the Jailer's effect and Underworld Breach's effect apply in layer 6, and neither effect is dependent on the other, so the effects apply in timestamp order. ![]() Do the cards in their graveyard have escape or not?Ī: They do. Q: I control Yixlid Jailer and my opponent plays Underworld Breach. Let's answer some rules questions while the party is underway.Īs always, if you have questions for us, please email them to or tweet short questions to us One of our writers will get back to you with an answer, and your question might show up in a future article. However, I am a man of my word, so I rented the largest conference hall in town to host the party, and then I retreated to a safe distance several miles away. You can see them in the pictures of this article. To celebrate his Sweet Sixteen, Moko requested a small birthday party with just three of his friends, which I unwisely agreed to before I found out which three friends he had in mind. Today is a very special day, because today marks the sixteenth anniversary of Cranial Insertion. ![]() This is one of them.Greetings and welcome to another issue of Cranial Insertion.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |