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6 months ago ::
Dec 13, 2012 - 11:57AM
#1
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Date Joined:
Dec 13, 2012
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I was playing at my local gaming shop yesterday and the guy I was playing started to use a mechanic he called "Chaining". According to him, Chaining allows him to play a spell, after I have enacted one of my own, and his become pre-emptive, thus circumnavigating my cards that were being played.
I've been looking through the rules, and hunting for sometime on threads and websites, and have not come across this mechanic. Will someone please tell me what "Chaining" is, it's legality, etc. It just seems to be a cheaters way to undo their inability to anticipate their opponents moves.
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6 months ago ::
Dec 13, 2012 - 11:59AM
#2
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Date Joined:
Oct 29, 2007
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sounds like you've been BS'ed however, it's legal to respond to spells or abilities Cancel for example is cast in response to a spell to counter it if you cast Giant growth at your creature, an opponent can cast Murder at it in response effectively wasting your Giant Growth and your creature
MtG Rules Advisor & Goth/Industrial/EBM/Indie/Alternative/80's-Wave DJDJ VortexDCI Certified Rules Advisor from July 14, 2009 to July 14, 2012 DCI #5209514320 Wit found in Rules Q&ARPJesus: "Man, screw the rules, I'll play a game of 2HG Archenemy Planechase Emperor EDH draft yet. Once I figure out the rules for it..." Chaikov: "Of course, casual Magic may be played any way your Pokemon group agrees on..." and "It's not logic. It's Magic!" GainsBanding: "I only play online. The Magic Online shuffler is AWESOME!" Ikegami: "one might think [adult cats] would make excellent tokens. The issue, though, is that they are very hard to exile. They return to the battlefield more often than an undying creature." Astarael7: "Does 121.1 imply that players are supposed to wear their poison counters?" Bimmerbot: "If you move the wrong way and [the poison counters] fall, it's a game rule violation" Helluminatus: "Just remember, if it looks like a duck, smells like a duck, and quacks like a duck, but the oracle text says creature - Bunny , then by god, it's a bunny." MadCow21: "Who are you and what have you done with the real Chaikov?" My Wife's Makeup Artist Page <-- cool stuff - check it out
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6 months ago ::
Dec 13, 2012 - 11:59AM
#3
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Date Joined:
Jan 24, 2011
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It's not called chaining. It's called "responding" or "using the stack." Players can respond to each others' spells or abiltiies. When this happens, the most recently casted spell or ability resolves first, the next most recently cast spell/ability resolves next, and so on. I think there's a section on it in the basic rulebook.
Rules Advisor Please autocard: [c ]Disenchant[/c ] = Disenchant .
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6 months ago ::
Dec 13, 2012 - 12:03PM
#4
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Date Joined:
Jun 21, 2006
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According to him, Chaining allows him to play a spell, after I have enacted one of my own, and his become pre-emptive, thus circumnavigating my cards that were being played.
What cards were being played? What happened? This might be perfectly legal play; Magic is a complex game.
Perhaps only the vocabulary is wrong... «Chaining», «enacted», «pre-emptive» & «circumnavigating» are not listed in Magic's Glossary.
«Dystocracy : A system of government in which corrupt leadership colludes with dishonest bankers and greedy elites in order to ensure that productive members of society –people who actually do useful work- bear the greatest share of taxes while gaining the least benefit possible.»
Sounds familiar?
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6 months ago ::
Dec 13, 2012 - 12:03PM
#5
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I was playing at my local gaming shop yesterday and the guy I was playing started to use a mechanic he called "Chaining". According to him, Chaining allows him to play a spell, after I have enacted one of my own, and his become pre-emptive, thus circumnavigating my cards that were being played.
I've been looking through the rules, and hunting for sometime on threads and websites, and have not come across this mechanic. Will someone please tell me what "Chaining" is, it's legality, etc. It just seems to be a cheaters way to undo their inability to anticipate their opponents moves.
This deals with three main things here: First of all it deals with the zone known as the stack, which is where spells go when they are cast. How spells may be placed into the stack and how they resolve out of the stack can be described with LIFO and APNAP Last In First Out
Active Player Not Active Player
If someone reacts to you putting a spell or ability on the stack, it happens first since the last one in the stack is the first one out.
A person who's turn it isn't can't do anything except in response to something the active player has done (other than the yielded priority during the changing of phases which is initiated by the active player) which means that person's effect will almost certainly happen before the person who's turn it is.
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6 months ago ::
Dec 13, 2012 - 2:45PM
#6
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Date Joined:
Jul 18, 2012
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"Chaining" is actually a term from Yuu-Gi-Ou.
YGO Chains are similar to MTG's stack, with the exception that once all players stop adding to the Chain, no one can add anything new until the entire Chain has resolved.
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6 months ago ::
Dec 13, 2012 - 3:46PM
#7
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Date Joined:
Aug 13, 2001
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His terminology is non-standard, or on one case, just plain wrong - saying "circumnavigate" (do one complete circuit around) when he obviously meant "circumvent" (negate). But this sounds like nothing worse than a rather awkward attempt to describe responding to things. It's pretty fundamental to Magic and well-described in several of the above posts. However, there is a common point of confusion here you should be aware of, and that he might have been trying to exploit (it's hard to tell from your rather vague description). Suppose I tap my Prodigal Pyromancer to deal a point of damage to one of your creatures, which will kill it, and in response you Murder the Pyromancer. This is perfectly legal, and the Murder will resolve first. However, this does not prevent the damage from happening - your creature will still die. Removing the source of an ability that's already on the stack does not counter or otherwise mess with that ability.
Jeff Heikkinen DCI Rules Advisor since Dec 25, 2011
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