Wrath of God. If you like Goblin-themed decks, Mad Auntie is a good addition. Maybe, but it allows for more varied plays instead of just an indestructible creature bashing away. Bash to Bits. Regeneration has been out of the game for quite a while, and anything similar that comes along in new sets would be a great door to some unique gameplay. What do you think? Should maybe a simpler version of regeneration be brought back, or is this just a relic of the past that seems better than it was?
Let us know your thoughts in the comments down below! Note: this post contains affiliate links. I like regeneration more than indestructible. To me, indestructible is more confusing. If something is indestructible, why is it removable at all? It is also boring because it is so hard to get rid of.
If indestructible replaced regeneration, cards like Terror should kill indestructible. Finding this article really late, but…. If you play a creature with Morph face down, that creature gets destroyed, and you regenerate it using an instant… does it regenerate face down, or does it regenerate face up?
After a brief debate we settled on regenerating face-down… preserving the state it was in when it was regenerated. Was that the right call? All rights reserved. The copyright for Magic: the Gathering and all associated card names and card images is held by Wizards of the Coast. Our Privacy Policy. Table of Contents. Ender likes to write articles and to come up with unusual plays.
Although he is a veteran with over 10 years of experience in Magic, he sees himself as a casual player. You can run into him playing MTG: Arena, probably trying one of his absurd decks. Bob February 19, am. Dan Troha February 19, am. Sacrifice as an effect can be prevented, or redirected, or replaced.
I'm not really alluding that regeneration can save a sacrifice, but a sacrifice as an effect isn't nearly as final as sacrifice as a cost. The bottom line is, in no situation , will you be able to save a creature from Sacrifice as a Cost. You can save a creature from sacrifice as an effect, but not through regeneration.
No, you can't do that, because Regeneration doesn't protect against a Sacrifice. The rules for Sacrifice even explicitly assert as much: Sign up or log in Sign up using Google. Sign up using Facebook. Sign up using Email and Password. Post as a guest Name. Email Required, but never shown.
Featured on Meta. Now live: A fully responsive profile. Related 4. Hot Network Questions. Question feed. The card says "Whenever a source you control other than Talon of Pain deals damage to an opponent, put a charge counter on Talon of Pain.
Which way is correct? A: Your local judge is correct. When a card refers to its own name in its text, it refers only to itself. The clause "other than Talon of Pain " means "other than this card", other Talons of Pain will trigger it, and you can put counters on one Talon of Pain if another Talon of Pain deals damage.
Q: If you lose life while Lich's Tomb is in play and can't sacrifice a permanent what happens? Also if you're under zero life and this occurs what happens? A: You will usually have a permanent to sacrifice — Lich's Tomb is also a permanent that can be sacrificed, and you must sacrifice it if there are no other permanents to sacrifice. With its effect not active anymore, you will lose the game if you are at zero of less life.
A: You can do this. Culling Scales targets a permanent with the lowest converted mana cost each of your upkeeps, and you are allowed to choose indestructible permanents even though they won't be destroyed by the effect.
Mycosynth Lattice only changes permanents in play to artifacts, cards not in play are just colorless, but not artifacts. Since the Engineer can only be used to pay for artifact spells and activated artifact abilities, it can't be used to pay for the colorless Mana Leak , it's not an artifact.
Q: If I play Machinate , will I be able to stack the cards that are put back? A: Yes, you will. When multiple cards are put into the library at the same time, the owner of the library chooses the order they go into the library. You can put the cards in any order you like. Nevinyrral's Disk is usually destroyed by its own effect, but if it has a regeneration shield, it won't be destroyed, it will be regenerated instead.
This is different from many similar cards, like Oblivion Stone , which says that you sacrifice it to pay the activation cost — it's not possible to regenerate something that is sacrificed, only things that are destroyed. Q: I was wondering what happens when you animate equipment and then activate it targeting itself?
Does the Skullclamp die, while checking for state-based effects? And if so do I get to draw 2 cards? A: Equipment that is also a creature can't equip anything, so this trick won't work. You can activate the equip ability, trying to have Skullclamp equip itself when it's a creature, but rule Also, if an equipment that is equipping a creature is turned into a creature, it immediately stops equipping the creature.
A: You're exactly right. Sun Droplet 's abilities are triggered abilities you can tell, because triggered abilities begin with "When", "Whenever" or "At". Triggered abilities are almost always cumulative.
When you're dealt 5 damage, all your Sun Droplet s will see it, and all of them will trigger. They gain 5 counters each. And every turn, for the same reason, each one will gain you 1 life. Q: I was playing a game with my friend and a question came up as to who is supposed to draw a card when Solemn Simulacrum goes to the graveyard. I gained control of my friend's Solemn Simulacrum via Confusion in the Ranks. Then I sacrificed the Simulacrum to my Atog. Do I the current controller draw the card or does my friend the owner of Solemn draw the card from Simulacrum's triggered ability?
A: You draw the card.
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