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I thought it was answered already? ANB targets everything outside of LoR and discard pile, which by precedent, is able to target out of play areas.
That's because not in battle has been defined
Quote from: lp670sv on March 03, 2012, 05:40:22 PMThat's because not in battle has been definedSo? The reason for why it is that way doesn't change that it is the precedent now.
Except that's what precedents are: rulings/definitions for a type of thing that demonstrate how that type of thing is treated.
This isn't the dictionary, it's redemption. Your argument holds no wait. ANB says shuffle all cards in the field of the play, the definition of artifact pile includes the it being in the field of play therefore it shuffles the ENTIRE pile.
ANB targets an area, Split altar targets a specific card (the artifact). You can't specifically target the artifact in SAs case because they are not in play and SA says in play, ANB can target the area and everything in that area just like Lampy targets the specific area of Not in Battle.
Targeting an area is not the same as trying to target a specific card.
I'm of the opinion that the definition of field of play should NOT include "in play" because then it breaks so many other things (like artifact piles, face-down cards, etc.). I'm also of the opinion that, since Lampy can't protect face-down cards, ANB shouldn't be able to shuffle them either.I think I said that, lp, lol. face-down cards/artifacts are in territory, which means they are in the Field of Play, but they are not themselves "in play" so the REG definition of Field of Play needs to change (or face-downs being not in play needs to change, either one).
Haha, there are a lot of things we could say about hindsight and this game.