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Wait...so cascading negates no longer work either? When did I miss this??? Something doesn't seem right about this...
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what does the term " cascading negates" mean?
Quote from: TechnoEthicist on January 10, 2012, 07:18:58 AMWait...so cascading negates no longer work either? When did I miss this??? Something doesn't seem right about this...Cascading negates still work, just not in the case of the special inish.
Quote from: SomeKittens on January 10, 2012, 09:37:21 AMQuote from: TechnoEthicist on January 10, 2012, 07:18:58 AMWait...so cascading negates no longer work either? When did I miss this??? Something doesn't seem right about this...Cascading negates still work, just not in the case of the special inish.But why not? Special initiative requires that I interrupt/negate the card removing me, so why does indirect negation not qualify for that? Indirect negation is still negation....
Alex, can you explain your point further? If I negate the character's ability, then the battle winner could not have been played and would return to discard. How is this any different than if I negated and discarded an evil character who played a battle winner, that enhancement would no longer have a source to be played on (a la My Lord and My God, Joseph Before Pharaoh, etc)? If I negate the ability of the EC it's as if that card never existed...
Quote from: delarosajon on January 10, 2012, 10:11:32 AMwhat does the term " cascading negates" mean? It's a term used to describe the relationship between negating one card causing the indirect negation of another card.Example: My opponent blocks with Nebuchadnezzar (while a Daniel hero is in play) and searches Dream. He draws three and chooses not to play an enhancement. If I then played Magnifact (to negate character abilities), I would negate Nebby's search for dream, which would indirectly negate the draw 3 that my opponent received, and Dream would return to the deck.
Quote from: Alex_Olijar on January 10, 2012, 10:17:39 AMQuote from: delarosajon on January 10, 2012, 10:11:32 AMwhat does the term " cascading negates" mean? It's a term used to describe the relationship between negating one card causing the indirect negation of another card.Example: My opponent blocks with Nebuchadnezzar (while a Daniel hero is in play) and searches Dream. He draws three and chooses not to play an enhancement. If I then played Magnifact (to negate character abilities), I would negate Nebby's search for dream, which would indirectly negate the draw 3 that my opponent received, and Dream would return to the deck.If Nebuchadnezzar said, "Search for .... Cannot be negated if no Daniel hero is in play," then I think that would be a good example, but as is, if there is a Daniel hero in play, Neb can't even search at all, so that doesn't work.
Quote from: TechnoEthicist on January 10, 2012, 11:29:52 AMAlex, can you explain your point further? If I negate the character's ability, then the battle winner could not have been played and would return to discard. How is this any different than if I negated and discarded an evil character who played a battle winner, that enhancement would no longer have a source to be played on (a la My Lord and My God, Joseph Before Pharaoh, etc)? If I negate the ability of the EC it's as if that card never existed...If the EC is targeting you for discard via an enhancement, you can't target the EC without negating the enhancement.
Just remember that in a case of special initiative, you MUST directly do something about the ability causing special inish.