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Started by Maxpayne03, June 10, 2015, 10:33:56 AM

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Maxpayne03

On my main phase, I cast {Azusa, Lost but Seeking} then it resolves, then I play an additional land, do I retain my priority to play another land? I know that my opponent has {Lightning Bolt} in his hand.

griffin131

Playing a land doesn't use the stack and can't be responded to. No priority is passed.

Play all your lands, but if you attempt to cast anything or change phases, expect the Bolt.

Maxpayne03


particle

Quote from: griffin131 on June 10, 2015, 10:35:09 AM
Playing a land doesn't use the stack and can't be responded to. No priority is passed.

Play all your lands, but if you attempt to cast anything or change phases, expect the Bolt.

Or if your land has a trigger, like a {Boros garrison} it can be responded to. If you play your Azusa, then you play a garrison, with the bounce trigger on the stack I can bolt your Azusa before you can play your second extra land.

LinkCelestrial

{Exploration}. I don't know how to link the ruling but basically if you call your first land the land off Azusa it doesn't matter if they kill her you still have your "normal" land drop. Check out the ruling for better wording.

Kaylesh

Quote from: LinkCelestrial on June 10, 2015, 03:55:52 PM
{Exploration}. I don't know how to link the ruling but basically if you call your first land the land off Azusa it doesn't matter if they kill her you still have your "normal" land drop. Check out the ruling for better wording.
Ok, that's weird. Usually the gatherer entry will have card rulings under details. Those you can copy. (For those among us who didn't purchase in-app rulings). However, this card has no gatherer rulings.

Kaylesh

Found this:
Quote
Rhadamanthus says... #3

I'm surprised the quoted rulings note is still in Gatherer, because the rules about extra land plays don't work that way anymore. Under the current rules you wouldn't be able to play another Forest in that situation regardless of what happened earlier in the turn.

To determine whether or not you can play a land, you compare the current number of land plays you have available to the number of lands you've already played this turn. Additional land plays stack up on each other.

April 18, 2014 2:57 p.m.
I'm gonna pull the CR on playing lands. Looks like the ruling is different nowadays

EDIT:
305.2a: To determine whether a player can play a land, compare the number of lands the player can play this turn with the number of lands he or she has already played this turn (including lands played as special actions and lands played during the resolution of spells and abilities). If the number of lands the player can play is greater, the play is legal.

Kaylesh

TLDR:
Should your opponent bolt Azusa, your allowed land plays per turn drops from 3 to 1.
Say you played a land with an etb trigger and your opponent responded to that with bolt, you cannot play more lands.

However, what Griffin stated stands:
Quote from: griffin131 on June 10, 2015, 10:35:09 AM
Playing a land doesn't use the stack and can't be responded to. No priority is passed.

Play all your lands, but if you attempt to cast anything or change phases, expect the Bolt.