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Quote from: TheHobbit13 on July 16, 2010, 12:13:56 PMI disagree, the situation seems more like a situation where I capture my opponents ET (I have one in my territory) and place him in my land of bondage . Then I have to discard one of them, but to my knowledge I can still capture ET.The difference in that example is that the other ET is your opponent's. The Chamber scenario is more like the banding scenario because one player owns and controls both.
I disagree, the situation seems more like a situation where I capture my opponents ET (I have one in my territory) and place him in my land of bondage . Then I have to discard one of them, but to my knowledge I can still capture ET.
Actually, if you have an ET in your territory, I'm not entirely sure that you can capture your opponent's ET. I don't believe you can willfully cause a situation where you control two copies of the same character.
Quote from: Professoralstad on July 16, 2010, 12:24:11 PMActually, if you have an ET in your territory, I'm not entirely sure that you can capture your opponent's ET. I don't believe you can willfully cause a situation where you control two copies of the same character. I agree with the "other Prof" in that I'm not sure you can capture ET if you also have ET in your territory.As for YMT's quote of the Reg, it doesn't say it is allowed, it just says what to do if it happens. So if you played a card that said that you got to capture a character of you opponent's choosing, then they could give you ET to force you to discard one (so that they could get their ET back).
As for YMT's quote of the Reg, it doesn't say it is allowed, it just says what to do if it happens.
So if you played a card that said that you got to capture a character of you opponent's choosing, then they could give you ET to force you to discard one (so that they could get their ET back).
This is a contradictory statement. How can it happen if it is not allowed to happen?
Quote from: Prof Underwood on July 16, 2010, 03:11:46 PMSo if you played a card that said that you got to capture a character of you opponent's choosing, then they could give you ET to force you to discard one (so that they could get their ET back).What card says that?
This came up with out Tuesday night playgroup and the consensus was that a game rule (no duplicates are allowed to be controlled by the same player; if this happens then discard one) overrides the Chamber's special ability therefore one of your Michael's gets discarded. To my knowledge (as a non-elder) this is how it should be played...
You can use a special ability and choose a target that causes you to control two copies of the same unique character (as long as that special ability does not add the character to battle).
How would a Moses in battle capture a Moses in your opponent's territory?
Quote from: YourMathTeacher on July 17, 2010, 11:58:04 PMHow would a Moses in battle capture a Moses in your opponent's territory?But they are saying that if I already have your Moses captured in my LoB, then I can't play Transfig to add my Moses to battle.
This is completely hypothetical, but I convert 1 of your Moses GCs. Then I attack with my own Moses. You block with your Moses EC, ....
Quote from: Prof Underwood on July 18, 2010, 12:53:40 AMThis is completely hypothetical, but I convert 1 of your Moses GCs. Then I attack with my own Moses. You block with your Moses EC, ....I just addressed this a few posts up. The glossary specifially says that you cannot cause duplicates to fight each other.
unless Moses has some complicated issue with multiple personalities.
FWIW, I am talking about Redemption rules, not pyschoanalysis.
has this been resolved yet? I'm far too lazy to read all of the posts...