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What happens when multiple “when this creature dies” triggers happen at the same time?
The Next CEO of Stack OverflowWhat is the difference between “flying” and “this creature can only be blocked by creatures with flying”?What order do triggered abilities happen in if multiple things trigger at the same time?What happens when a creature with Persist AND Undying dies? ('return to battlefield' issues…)What happens when a creature with “Whenever a creature dies” dies simultaneously with multiple other creatures?What happens when more than one creature dies causing a triggerIf both players are killed at the same time, do they both die?When a permanent has a “When a creature dies” ability, and gets destroyed at the same time as creatures, does that ability trigger?Triggered ability of another card when two legendary creatures with the same name enter to the battlefield at the same timeClone legion - multiple creatures enter battlefield at same timeWhat happens if multiple triggers on the stack would cause both players to drop to 0 life if fully resolved?
In Magic the Gathering, If I have Gate to the Afterlife and Shadows of the Past on the battlefield and one of my creatures die which ability activates first? Would I have to scry first or would I have to heal/draw/discard first?
magic-the-gathering
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In Magic the Gathering, If I have Gate to the Afterlife and Shadows of the Past on the battlefield and one of my creatures die which ability activates first? Would I have to scry first or would I have to heal/draw/discard first?
magic-the-gathering
add a comment |
In Magic the Gathering, If I have Gate to the Afterlife and Shadows of the Past on the battlefield and one of my creatures die which ability activates first? Would I have to scry first or would I have to heal/draw/discard first?
magic-the-gathering
In Magic the Gathering, If I have Gate to the Afterlife and Shadows of the Past on the battlefield and one of my creatures die which ability activates first? Would I have to scry first or would I have to heal/draw/discard first?
magic-the-gathering
magic-the-gathering
edited Mar 24 at 17:50
doppelgreener
16.2k860123
16.2k860123
asked Mar 24 at 6:30
atlster455atlster455
332
332
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1 Answer
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Both capacities will trigger in the same time. You choose the one to apply first. (you put them on the stack in the order that you want)
603.3b If multiple abilities have triggered since the last time a player received priority, each player, in APNAP order, puts triggered abilities they control on the stack in any order they choose.
APNAP order is Active player/non active player order. This means that effects from the active player, the one who's turn it is, get put on the stack first, in the order they choose, then the next player in turn order and so on. The last thing put on the stack is the first to resolve, so the person who's turn is farthest away will have their triggers resolve first.
1
It's usually considered pertinent to quote the specific paragraphs of the rules which back up your answer. In this case, it's 603.3b. I took the liberty of adding it to your answer.
– Arthur
Mar 24 at 17:19
1
Do we also need to define APNAP order? I don't have a good feel for how accessible the acronym is.
– Arcanist Lupus
Mar 24 at 20:08
1
@ArcanistLupus, yes. The OP is not familiar with the stack, so I would assume they are not familiar with APNAP.
– John
Mar 24 at 20:43
1
@ArcanistLupus I read up about APNAP order and from what I could gather it would pretty much mean that my opponents triggered abilities (If he/she had any) would resolve before my triggered abilities would resolve. Is this correct?
– atlster455
Mar 25 at 4:14
1
@atlster455 if it's your turn, yes. The player whose turn it is puts their triggers on the stack first, which means that other players' triggers resolve first.
– Arcanist Lupus
Mar 25 at 4:41
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1 Answer
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Both capacities will trigger in the same time. You choose the one to apply first. (you put them on the stack in the order that you want)
603.3b If multiple abilities have triggered since the last time a player received priority, each player, in APNAP order, puts triggered abilities they control on the stack in any order they choose.
APNAP order is Active player/non active player order. This means that effects from the active player, the one who's turn it is, get put on the stack first, in the order they choose, then the next player in turn order and so on. The last thing put on the stack is the first to resolve, so the person who's turn is farthest away will have their triggers resolve first.
1
It's usually considered pertinent to quote the specific paragraphs of the rules which back up your answer. In this case, it's 603.3b. I took the liberty of adding it to your answer.
– Arthur
Mar 24 at 17:19
1
Do we also need to define APNAP order? I don't have a good feel for how accessible the acronym is.
– Arcanist Lupus
Mar 24 at 20:08
1
@ArcanistLupus, yes. The OP is not familiar with the stack, so I would assume they are not familiar with APNAP.
– John
Mar 24 at 20:43
1
@ArcanistLupus I read up about APNAP order and from what I could gather it would pretty much mean that my opponents triggered abilities (If he/she had any) would resolve before my triggered abilities would resolve. Is this correct?
– atlster455
Mar 25 at 4:14
1
@atlster455 if it's your turn, yes. The player whose turn it is puts their triggers on the stack first, which means that other players' triggers resolve first.
– Arcanist Lupus
Mar 25 at 4:41
add a comment |
Both capacities will trigger in the same time. You choose the one to apply first. (you put them on the stack in the order that you want)
603.3b If multiple abilities have triggered since the last time a player received priority, each player, in APNAP order, puts triggered abilities they control on the stack in any order they choose.
APNAP order is Active player/non active player order. This means that effects from the active player, the one who's turn it is, get put on the stack first, in the order they choose, then the next player in turn order and so on. The last thing put on the stack is the first to resolve, so the person who's turn is farthest away will have their triggers resolve first.
1
It's usually considered pertinent to quote the specific paragraphs of the rules which back up your answer. In this case, it's 603.3b. I took the liberty of adding it to your answer.
– Arthur
Mar 24 at 17:19
1
Do we also need to define APNAP order? I don't have a good feel for how accessible the acronym is.
– Arcanist Lupus
Mar 24 at 20:08
1
@ArcanistLupus, yes. The OP is not familiar with the stack, so I would assume they are not familiar with APNAP.
– John
Mar 24 at 20:43
1
@ArcanistLupus I read up about APNAP order and from what I could gather it would pretty much mean that my opponents triggered abilities (If he/she had any) would resolve before my triggered abilities would resolve. Is this correct?
– atlster455
Mar 25 at 4:14
1
@atlster455 if it's your turn, yes. The player whose turn it is puts their triggers on the stack first, which means that other players' triggers resolve first.
– Arcanist Lupus
Mar 25 at 4:41
add a comment |
Both capacities will trigger in the same time. You choose the one to apply first. (you put them on the stack in the order that you want)
603.3b If multiple abilities have triggered since the last time a player received priority, each player, in APNAP order, puts triggered abilities they control on the stack in any order they choose.
APNAP order is Active player/non active player order. This means that effects from the active player, the one who's turn it is, get put on the stack first, in the order they choose, then the next player in turn order and so on. The last thing put on the stack is the first to resolve, so the person who's turn is farthest away will have their triggers resolve first.
Both capacities will trigger in the same time. You choose the one to apply first. (you put them on the stack in the order that you want)
603.3b If multiple abilities have triggered since the last time a player received priority, each player, in APNAP order, puts triggered abilities they control on the stack in any order they choose.
APNAP order is Active player/non active player order. This means that effects from the active player, the one who's turn it is, get put on the stack first, in the order they choose, then the next player in turn order and so on. The last thing put on the stack is the first to resolve, so the person who's turn is farthest away will have their triggers resolve first.
edited Mar 25 at 17:42
Andrew
5,9051839
5,9051839
answered Mar 24 at 8:46
Emilyen LEmilyen L
11612
11612
1
It's usually considered pertinent to quote the specific paragraphs of the rules which back up your answer. In this case, it's 603.3b. I took the liberty of adding it to your answer.
– Arthur
Mar 24 at 17:19
1
Do we also need to define APNAP order? I don't have a good feel for how accessible the acronym is.
– Arcanist Lupus
Mar 24 at 20:08
1
@ArcanistLupus, yes. The OP is not familiar with the stack, so I would assume they are not familiar with APNAP.
– John
Mar 24 at 20:43
1
@ArcanistLupus I read up about APNAP order and from what I could gather it would pretty much mean that my opponents triggered abilities (If he/she had any) would resolve before my triggered abilities would resolve. Is this correct?
– atlster455
Mar 25 at 4:14
1
@atlster455 if it's your turn, yes. The player whose turn it is puts their triggers on the stack first, which means that other players' triggers resolve first.
– Arcanist Lupus
Mar 25 at 4:41
add a comment |
1
It's usually considered pertinent to quote the specific paragraphs of the rules which back up your answer. In this case, it's 603.3b. I took the liberty of adding it to your answer.
– Arthur
Mar 24 at 17:19
1
Do we also need to define APNAP order? I don't have a good feel for how accessible the acronym is.
– Arcanist Lupus
Mar 24 at 20:08
1
@ArcanistLupus, yes. The OP is not familiar with the stack, so I would assume they are not familiar with APNAP.
– John
Mar 24 at 20:43
1
@ArcanistLupus I read up about APNAP order and from what I could gather it would pretty much mean that my opponents triggered abilities (If he/she had any) would resolve before my triggered abilities would resolve. Is this correct?
– atlster455
Mar 25 at 4:14
1
@atlster455 if it's your turn, yes. The player whose turn it is puts their triggers on the stack first, which means that other players' triggers resolve first.
– Arcanist Lupus
Mar 25 at 4:41
1
1
It's usually considered pertinent to quote the specific paragraphs of the rules which back up your answer. In this case, it's 603.3b. I took the liberty of adding it to your answer.
– Arthur
Mar 24 at 17:19
It's usually considered pertinent to quote the specific paragraphs of the rules which back up your answer. In this case, it's 603.3b. I took the liberty of adding it to your answer.
– Arthur
Mar 24 at 17:19
1
1
Do we also need to define APNAP order? I don't have a good feel for how accessible the acronym is.
– Arcanist Lupus
Mar 24 at 20:08
Do we also need to define APNAP order? I don't have a good feel for how accessible the acronym is.
– Arcanist Lupus
Mar 24 at 20:08
1
1
@ArcanistLupus, yes. The OP is not familiar with the stack, so I would assume they are not familiar with APNAP.
– John
Mar 24 at 20:43
@ArcanistLupus, yes. The OP is not familiar with the stack, so I would assume they are not familiar with APNAP.
– John
Mar 24 at 20:43
1
1
@ArcanistLupus I read up about APNAP order and from what I could gather it would pretty much mean that my opponents triggered abilities (If he/she had any) would resolve before my triggered abilities would resolve. Is this correct?
– atlster455
Mar 25 at 4:14
@ArcanistLupus I read up about APNAP order and from what I could gather it would pretty much mean that my opponents triggered abilities (If he/she had any) would resolve before my triggered abilities would resolve. Is this correct?
– atlster455
Mar 25 at 4:14
1
1
@atlster455 if it's your turn, yes. The player whose turn it is puts their triggers on the stack first, which means that other players' triggers resolve first.
– Arcanist Lupus
Mar 25 at 4:41
@atlster455 if it's your turn, yes. The player whose turn it is puts their triggers on the stack first, which means that other players' triggers resolve first.
– Arcanist Lupus
Mar 25 at 4:41
add a comment |
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