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Except that the Play-As actually changes what DoN does, therefore it's disguised as errata, therefore it is disregarded.
Quote from: SomeKittens on February 16, 2012, 09:50:14 AMExcept that the Play-As actually changes what DoN does, therefore it's disguised as errata, therefore it is disregarded.I'm a bit tired of all the "disregard play-as" talk here on the forum, and this is definitely a case where it doesn't belong. The Play-As for Destruction of Nehustan IS the correct way to interpret the card. It emphasizes that the discard happens first, which is exactly why Lampstand protects from DoN.
The first case of having multiple abilities came in Kings.
The important thing to note here is that it's not an errata.
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Quote from: Chronic Apathy on February 16, 2012, 03:41:18 PMThe important thing to note here is that it's not an errata.Exactly. It may seem to be the same thing, but it's not. There are slight differences, in that the original wording still negates the art.
Discard one Artifact to negate its special ability.
I've always been told that the negate still works, despite the lack of discard.
Quote from: SomeKittens on February 16, 2012, 04:33:35 PMI've always been told that the negate still works, despite the lack of discard.if that were the case, DoN could hit lampy.
I count negating lampy as hitting it.
Quote from: lp670sv on February 16, 2012, 05:10:07 PMI count negating lampy as hitting it.Except DoN doesn't negate it. In the second sentence, when DoN says, "artifact is negated," it's referring to the artifact that was just discarded. Lampstand keeps DoN from targeting any cards with the discard, and since no artifact can be targeted with the discard, the negate doesn't target anything either (since the negate specifically targets whatever was just discarded).
Alright, looks like I was wrong. Fortunately, I've never had to rule on that.