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6 months ago ::
Dec 25, 2012 - 2:42PM
#11
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- Celestial Teapots are broken!
Date Joined:
Feb 24, 2007
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We do have an [O] ruling that Maralen of the Mornsong negates the entire effect of Knollspine Dragon . Because it's impossible to draw, you can't choose to "discard and draw". I think the same would go for Ondu Giant and Mindlock Orb .
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6 months ago ::
Dec 25, 2012 - 3:10PM
#12
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Date Joined:
Dec 13, 2011
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The rule for indestructible is as follows. "700.4. If a permanent is indestructible, rules and effects can't destroy it." It doesn't say that costs can't destroy it, and Floral Spuzzem 's Oracle wording uses destruction as a cost (although it may also be an effect in this case).
Rules Advisor
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6 months ago ::
Dec 25, 2012 - 3:26PM
#13
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- Celestial Teapots are broken!
Date Joined:
Feb 24, 2007
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As you'd already pointed out, costs and effects aren't mutually exclusive. The destruction there is both.
If the targeted artifact is indestructible, it's not legal to choose to destroy it, so the Spuzzem will still deal its combat damage.
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6 months ago ::
Dec 25, 2012 - 3:29PM
#14
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Date Joined:
Dec 13, 2011
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Agreed, but there is at least one case (indestructible) where the distinction between something being a cost or an effect matters.
Rules Advisor
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6 months ago ::
Dec 25, 2012 - 3:30PM
#15
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Date Joined:
Jul 23, 2007
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6 months ago ::
Dec 25, 2012 - 3:53PM
#16
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Date Joined:
Jul 23, 2007
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Agreed, but there is at least one case (indestructible) where the distinction between something being a cost or an effect matters.
But then you're talking about non-effects and costs for "if you do" exist only inside effects, so this wouldn't help for this case. Also, a somewhat similar distinction is exists with "sacrifice". You can still sacrifice permanents to pay for playing spells and abilities even with Tajuru Preserver on the battlefield.
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6 months ago ::
Dec 25, 2012 - 3:55PM
#17
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Date Joined:
Dec 29, 2010
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As you'd already pointed out, costs and effects aren't mutually exclusive. The destruction there is both.
If the targeted artifact is indestructible, it's not legal to choose to destroy it, so the Spuzzem will still deal its combat damage.
Floral Spuzzem no longer uses the word "choose" in its oracle text; it only targets. So you can legally target an indestructible artifact. Even the original text actually targets.
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6 months ago ::
Dec 25, 2012 - 3:57PM
#18
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- Celestial Teapots are broken!
Date Joined:
Feb 24, 2007
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Agreed, but there is at least one case (indestructible) where the distinction between something being a cost or an effect matters.
This doesn't make sense. Even though you know that the two aren't mutually exclusive, you're still talking about it as through they're a dichotomy. You're trying to use the fact that things care whether something is an effect to imply that there are also things that care whether something is a cost, but this doesn't follow.
As you'd already pointed out, costs and effects aren't mutually exclusive. The destruction there is both.
If the targeted artifact is indestructible, it's not legal to choose to destroy it, so the Spuzzem will still deal its combat damage.
Floral Spuzzem no longer uses the word "choose" in its oracle text; it only targets. So you can legally target an indestructible artifact. Even the original text actually targets.
It says "you may". You can legally choose an indestructible artifact as target, but when the ability resolves, you can't choose to go for the "you may destroy [that artifact]".
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6 months ago ::
Dec 25, 2012 - 5:29PM
#19
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Date Joined:
Dec 13, 2011
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Agreed, but there is at least one case (indestructible) where the distinction between something being a cost or an effect matters.
This doesn't make sense. Even though you know that the two aren't mutually exclusive, you're still talking about it as through they're a dichotomy. You're trying to use the fact that things care whether something is an effect to imply that there are also things that care whether something is a cost, but this doesn't follow.
We agree that costs and effects are not mutually exclusive. My previous post was poorly phrased. Something can be a cost, or an effect, or both. There are places in the rules and on cards where costs or effects are explicitly mentioned. My point was that any rule or card that references what effects can do does not necessarily apply to costs, since costs are not (always) effects. I do not know of any situations where this distinction matters, but there are enough strange interactions in Magic that one probably exists.
Rules Advisor
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6 months ago ::
Dec 25, 2012 - 6:22PM
#20
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Date Joined:
Dec 29, 2010
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As you'd already pointed out, costs and effects aren't mutually exclusive. The destruction there is both.
If the targeted artifact is indestructible, it's not legal to choose to destroy it, so the Spuzzem will still deal its combat damage.
Floral Spuzzem no longer uses the word "choose" in its oracle text; it only targets. So you can legally target an indestructible artifact. Even the original text actually targets.
It says "you may". You can legally choose an indestructible artifact as target, but when the ability resolves, you can't choose to go for the "you may destroy [that artifact]".
Indeed it does! My mistake.
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