If my opponent has a {huntmaster of the fells} and a 2/2 wolf token and I go to {dreadbore} his huntmaster and in response opponent uses {faith's shield} and I in response put a {tragic slip} on the stack to target his huntmaster and {ultimate price} last on the stack to target his 2/2 wolf token will I have effectively destroyed his huntmaster and wolf token?
Yeah pretty mich.
Nice play.
Yes you did
Quote from: Testset on February 08, 2013, 02:14:28 PM
Correct. Last In, First Out:
The {Ultimate Price} will resolve first, destroying the wolf token and enabling morbid for the remainder of the turn.
Upon resolution, {Tragic Slip} will give the Huntmaster -13/-13 instead of -1/-1, which will put it into the graveyard. Having no target, the {Faith's Shield} will fizzle, followed by {Dreadbore}.
Word of advice: cast the Ultimate Price and let it resolve before casting Tragic Slip, in case they have another response. Otherwise you might waste three removal spells and kill nothing. 😉
Didn't wanna waste a kill spell on the 2/2 just had to go down that way.
Quote from: Jdogtoocool on February 08, 2013, 01:46:29 PM
If my opponent has a {huntmaster of the fells} and a 2/2 wolf token and I go to {dreadbore} his huntmaster and in response opponent uses {faith's shield} and I in response put a {tragic slip} on the stack to target his huntmaster and {ultimate price} last on the stack to target his 2/2 wolf token will I have effectively destroyed his huntmaster and wolf token?
So let me get this straight:
1.) Dreadbore cast on Huntmaster. (Player)
2.) Faith's Shield cast in response. (Opponent)
3.) Tragic Slip cast targeting Huntermaster. (Player)
4.) Ultimate Price cast targetting Huntmaster's 2/2 wolf token. (Player)
Now, I thought that once he cast Tragic Slip, priority passes to his opponent, who does nothing. So, priority goes back to the player, and spells resolve. But in this case, he's allowed to respond to his own casting?
When you play a spell, you do not have to pass priority. Here is a part of an article that explains it very well:
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"The rule is: whenever a player plays a spell, that player gets priority again until he passes it. So, in theory, a player could play four Lightning Bolts in a row, with a kickered Urza's Rage on top of that if he wanted to. As unfair as this might seem, it does not generally give the player any special advantage. Each spell still resolves one at a time; the fact that the player played the spells one after the other does not give the spells any special status. So, regardless of how many spells a player plays in a row, the other player will always get a chance to respond."
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