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Actually, I believe you cannot "un-play" a card. So if you play the card it is played and would not return to your draw pile, unless it's a Lost Soul in which case it would go back on top.
Quote from: KoalaKingoFA on March 13, 2014, 07:16:02 PMActually, I believe you cannot "un-play" a card. So if you play the card it is played and would not return to your draw pile, unless it's a Lost Soul in which case it would go back on top. but you can undraw cards correct? He draws then I play something to Negate that he puts them back correct?
Quote from: DrowningFish on March 13, 2014, 07:31:42 PMQuote from: KoalaKingoFA on March 13, 2014, 07:16:02 PMActually, I believe you cannot "un-play" a card. So if you play the card it is played and would not return to your draw pile, unless it's a Lost Soul in which case it would go back on top. but you can undraw cards correct? He draws then I play something to Negate that he puts them back correct?Correct. They go back in the same order he drew them.
No, the only cards that go back are the ones that you drew and did not play.
Transfiguration falls under the CBN category.
All, I disagree A LOT with the ruling, but we need to clear this up:By the current rules, you CAN unplay a card if it was played without the use of a play ability, if you negate the draw on which it was originally obtained. If it is not CBN (or CBI? fairly certain) it is cascade-negated and returned to deck.Sorry. I hate that rule a lot. I've argued it before. It won't be changed, in all likelihood.
Why should returning a played card to the top of a deck be considered negating the play ability?
Quote from: ChristianSoldier on March 14, 2014, 03:22:02 PMWhy should returning a played card to the top of a deck be considered negating the play ability?The logic behind the ruling is that, since the card was never drawn, it was never played. Ergo, the cascade negates it.