Community

 
Magic: The Gathering Rules Q&A Tokens do not have summoning sickness, right?
Jump Menu:
Post Reply
Page 1 of 3  •  1 2 3 Next
Switch to Forum Live View Tokens do not have summoning sickness, right?
3 years ago  ::  May 20, 2010 - 5:11AM #1
Jut
Date Joined: Oct 16, 2006
Posts: 79
So I just read the Token section here on the forums and if I am reading everything right, Tokens do not have summoning sickness. They are not summoned. This is correct, right?

In effect, Tokens have haste? (Essentially)

Just looking for some clarification and conformation on this.

Thanks a million!


Jut
Quick Reply
Cancel
3 years ago  ::  May 20, 2010 - 5:16AM #2
majinara
Date Joined: Mar 7, 2003
Posts: 885
All creatures have summoning sickness. If they are tokens, artifact creatures, animated lands or whatever is irrelevant. It's a creature? Then it can't attack or use abilities with the tap symbol as cost unless you controlled them since the beginning of your turn.
You need more lands!
You need more card draw!
You need more removal!
Quick Reply
Cancel
3 years ago  ::  May 20, 2010 - 5:18AM #3
Yarium
Date Joined: Sep 18, 2007
Posts: 2,503
Incorrect.

Everything that enters the battlefield "has" summoning sickness - but only creatures are affected by it.

That means that a Land has summoning sickness, but it doesn't matter (can still tap or untap the turn it enters the battlefield). However, if that land could also become a creature, and it became a creature on the turn it entered the battelfield, it would NOT be able to tap/untap once it was a creature, as at that point it would be affected by summoning sickness.


Tokens, regardless of what they are, also have summoning sickness - but only creature tokens are affected by it. Creature tokens cannot attack, tap, or untap on the turn they enter the battlefield.
You are Red/Blue!
You are Red/Blue!
Take The Magic Dual Colour Test - Beta today!
Created with Rum and Monkey's Personality Test Generator.



1000 posts w00t! Jun 17 - 2010

Me as a Planeswalker:
Spoiler: Show
Yarium, Planeswalker

Planeswalker - Yarium

+1: Each player reveals his or her hand until your next turn.

+3: Each player draws 3 cards.

-9: You receive an emblem that says, "At the beginning of each upkeep, search your library, graveyard, hand, and cards in exile for a card. You may play that card without paying its mana cost."

Loyalty: 2


I am a Rules Advisor as of This Date: Aug 13/2010

Reminder text will tell somebody "(You are stupid. Have less fun.)" -WotC_dlaugel
Quick Reply
Cancel
3 years ago  ::  May 20, 2010 - 6:07AM #4
Jut
Date Joined: Oct 16, 2006
Posts: 79
I understand what both of you are saying but this:

"Q: Does putting a creature token onto the battlefield count as casting a creature spell?
A: No. The act of "casting a spell" has a special meaning in magic, involving taking a card (usually from your hand), putting it onto the stack, choosing required targets, modes, and making other required decisions, and paying the required costs to do so. Putting a token onto the battlefield doesn't involve any of that--you aren't casting anything, much less a creature spell, when you put a token onto the battlefield.

Thus, putting a creature token onto the battlefield won't trigger abilities like EquilibriumImage.ashx?type=card&name=Equilibrium's, which trigger on casting a creature spell. They will, however, trigger abilities like PandemoniumImage.ashx?type=card&name=Pandemonium's, which trigger on a creature entering the battlefield and don't care how it got there."



Would seem to say otherwise. OR am I just missing something, I even read up on Summoning Sickness and it does not seem to address this.

OR . . .

Q: Do tokens have names?
A: Yes. A creature token's name is usually the same as its creature type(s); however, if the token is a copy of something, its name is the same as whatever it's a copy of, and if the effect that created it specified a name for it, that is its name.

Example: A "1/1 red Goblin Scout creature token" (Goblin ScoutsImage.ashx?type=card&name=Goblin Scouts) is named "Goblin Scout", but a "legendary 2/2 green and white Wolf creature token named Voja" (Tolsimir WolfbloodImage.ashx?type=card&name=Tolsimir Wolfblood) is named "Voja".

PLus this:

Q: What does 'summoning sickness' do?
A: Creatures with summoning sickness can't attack and can't use abilities with costs that include the mana_tap.gif or mana_untap.gif symbols. Creatures have summoning sickness if they have not been under their current controller's control since the beginning of that player's most recent turn.


Mean that the Token are in fact creatures, and while not traditionally "summoned" they are still a creature that has not been under my control since the beggining of my turn. (Is this the case?)

If so, the 1st qoute from the Token section is a bit misleading IMHO or is it just me? (it can be me, I can be dense at times!)


Thanks for helping me try to figure this out. (or did I just figure it out?)

Jut
Quick Reply
Cancel
3 years ago  ::  May 20, 2010 - 6:10AM #5
Anaesthetic
Date Joined: Apr 30, 2010
Posts: 573

May 20, 2010 -- 6:07AM, Jut wrote:

I understand what both of you are saying but this:

"Q: Does putting a creature token onto the battlefield count as casting a creature spell?
A: No. The act of "casting a spell" has a special meaning in magic, involving taking a card (usually from your hand), putting it onto the stack, choosing required targets, modes, and making other required decisions, and paying the required costs to do so. Putting a token onto the battlefield doesn't involve any of that--you aren't casting anything, much less a creature spell, when you put a token onto the battlefield.

Thus, putting a creature token onto the battlefield won't trigger abilities like Equilibrium's, which trigger on casting a creature spell. They will, however, trigger abilities like Pandemonium's, which trigger on a creature entering the battlefield and don't care how it got there."



Would seem to say otherwise. OR am I just missing something, I even read up on Summoning Sickness and it does not seem to address this.


Thanks for helping me try to figure this out.


Jut




What you quoted has nothing to do with tokens and summoning sickness. What you quoted is just stating that abilities that say "cast" will not be triggered when you put tokens onto the battlefield since you are not "casting" it from your hand.

EVERYTHING has summoning sickness...but as said above, creatures are the ones affected by it.

DCI Level 1 Judge
Katy, Texas
Quick Reply
Cancel
3 years ago  ::  May 20, 2010 - 6:11AM #6
cyphern
Date Joined: Jan 19, 2003
Posts: 17,674
Whether something is affected by summoning sickness is unrelated to the act of casting a spell. Something is affected by summoning sickness if both of the following are true:
  1. It is a creature
  2. It has not been under your control since the start of your most recent turn 

302.6. A creature's activated ability with the tap symbol or the untap symbol in its activation cost can't be activated unless the creature has been under its controller's control continuously since his or her most recent turn began. A creature can't attack unless it has been under its controller's control continuously since his or her most recent turn began. This rule is informally called the "summoning sickness" rule.


Quick Reply
Cancel
3 years ago  ::  May 20, 2010 - 6:12AM #7
Jut
Date Joined: Oct 16, 2006
Posts: 79
Just edited my post and I think I have it figured out.

Thanks!


Jut
Quick Reply
Cancel
3 years ago  ::  May 20, 2010 - 8:40AM #8
LMTRK
Date Joined: Mar 22, 2009
Posts: 6,894
Wasnt there a big argment recently over the fact that "summoning sickness" isnt limited to things that summoned, with a suggestion being made that the name of the term should change to avoid confusion?

"summoning sickness" can be induced by:
- changing controllers
- exiling and then bringing back
- casting, or simply putting onto the battefield
(and probably other things too - these are just examples)

It even affects creatures that werent creatures at the time they were put onto the battlefield (etc), like manlands (things that happened to the land before it became a creature can limit its abilities to do things after it becomes a creature).

~ Tim
I am Blue/White
Reached DCI Rating 1800 on 28/10/11. :D
Sig Show

May 23, 2013 -- 10:32AM, zammm wrote:

May 23, 2013 -- 10:06AM, Adroitmind@gmail.com wrote:

Not bad. But what happens flavor wise when one kamahl kills the other one?

Zis iz a sign uf deep psychological troma, buried in zer subconscious mind. By keelink himzelf, Kamahl iz physically expressink hiz feelinks uf self-disgust ova hiz desire for hiz muzzer. [/GermanPsychologistVoice]


Jan 5, 2013 -- 9:32PM, RPJesus wrote:

Jan 4, 2013 -- 5:20AM, LMTRK wrote:

That makes no sense to me.

If they spelled the ability out on the card in full then it would not be allowed in a mono-black Commander deck, but because they used a keyword to save space it is allowed?

~ Tim   


Yup, just like you can have Birds of paradise in a mono green deck but not Noble Hierarch . YAY COLOR IDENTITY


Oct 26, 2012 -- 9:56PM, zammm wrote:

Oct 26, 2012 -- 12:24AM, Raeoran wrote:

Is algebra really that difficult?

Survey says yes.


Jul 7, 2011 -- 12:59AM, Novacat wrote:

Jul 7, 2011 -- 12:36AM, LMTRK wrote:

You want to make a milky drink. You squeeze a cow.


I love this description. Like the cows are sponges filled with milk. I can see it all Nick Parks claymation-style with the cow's eyes bugging out momentarily as a giant farmer squeezes it like a squeaky dog toy, and milk shoots out of it.

Quick Reply
Cancel
3 years ago  ::  May 20, 2010 - 8:43AM #9
cyphern
Date Joined: Jan 19, 2003
Posts: 17,674

Wasnt there a big argment recently over the fact that "summoning sickness" isnt limited to things that summoned, with a suggestion being made that the name of the term should change to avoid confusion?


"Summoning sickness" is an informal term. How would they go about changing something that is unofficial? They'd have about as much success with that as trying to redefine the meaining of "mise" or "cantrip".

Summoning Sickness Rule

Informal term for a player's inability to attack with a creature or to activate its abilities that include the tap symbol or the untap symbol unless the creature has been under that player's control since the beginning of that player's most recent turn. See rule 302.6. See also Haste.


Quick Reply
Cancel
3 years ago  ::  May 20, 2010 - 8:44AM #10
forty2j
Date Joined: Apr 16, 2009
Posts: 5,410

May 20, 2010 -- 8:43AM, cyphern wrote:

They'd have about as much success with that as trying to redefine the meaining of "mise" or "cantrip".




.. or, indeed, "instant speed".


Rules Advisor.
Please autocard Show

[c]Dragon Fodder[/c] => Dragon Fodder
[c=Mycoloth]Nom nom nom[/c] => Nom nom nom

I am Blue/White Show
Quick Reply
Cancel
Page 1 of 3  •  1 2 3 Next
Jump Menu:
 
Magic: The Gathering Rules Q&A Tokens do not have summoning sickness, right?
    Viewing this thread :: 0 registered and 1 guest
    No registered users viewing