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I'm not sure where you heard this rule, but that is not the case. If a CBN ability is activated, it "sticks" and cannot be negated directly (by a negate card) or indirectly (cascade negated). Example: I attack with Tribal Elder and band to Abraham who searches deck for Isaac and bands to him (CBN). If you negate Tribal Elder, then Abraham leaves battle, but Isaac remains because he was banded in by a CBN ability.
Very opposite from intuitive.
QuoteVery opposite from intuitive.As opposed to letting a CBN ability be undone by a negate? When you think about it, the very concept of "negate" will never truly be intuitive because for the most part we (as humans) have very linear thinking.
Quote from: The Guardian on July 27, 2017, 04:19:55 PMQuoteVery opposite from intuitive.As opposed to letting a CBN ability be undone by a negate? When you think about it, the very concept of "negate" will never truly be intuitive because for the most part we (as humans) have very linear thinking.It's not negating Abrahams ability though, it would be as if it never occurred because he was never actually brought into battle due to a negate. I think that's what's confusing. The negate effects what brought Abraham into battle in the first place.
Quote from: Zerutul on July 27, 2017, 04:26:03 PMQuote from: The Guardian on July 27, 2017, 04:19:55 PMQuoteVery opposite from intuitive.As opposed to letting a CBN ability be undone by a negate? When you think about it, the very concept of "negate" will never truly be intuitive because for the most part we (as humans) have very linear thinking.It's not negating Abrahams ability though, it would be as if it never occurred because he was never actually brought into battle due to a negate. I think that's what's confusing. The negate effects what brought Abraham into battle in the first place.That's exactly what negating is though, making something to have never occurred. "Cannot be negated" means it cannot be made to have never occurred once it happens, whether that's directly or indirectly.
I just don't think negating the band means that you are literally negating everything that came into battle after it.
I feel like when you negate Tribal Elder you undo the band that's all you're negating, but it has implications because the band never happened. If the band never happened, it follows that Abraham never entered battle. If Abraham never entered battle then his ability never activated. So, because I negated the band, Abraham's ability did not activate. I don't see where the negation of Abraham's ability is happening. Nothing is being interrupted or prevented. So all I am in saying is it is confusing to me, and maybe to other people as well. A cbn card cannot be cascade negated, that's the rule and I am not disputing that; however, I don't think its consistent with the definition of negate, which makes it confusing to me ha
A negate ability takes a previously completed ability and undoes the effect of that ability, and any ability activated because of the negated ability. A negate ability keeps the uncompleted activation of an ability from ever completing
@Kevinthedude:But doesn't this still leaves the illogical part of the problem. If the initial SA is negated than according to REG: "A negate ability takes a previously completed ability and undoes the effect of that ability...". Nothing is stated here how subsequent abilities are treated. Maybe this should be extenden then? Like for example: "A negate ability takes a previously completed ability and undoes the effect of that ability and all subsequent completed abilities if they are not CBI resp. CBN ..." or wouldn't this be more clearly?
Quote from: Red Dragon Thorn on May 17, 2017, 01:16:03 AMA negate ability takes a previously completed ability and undoes the effect of that ability, and any ability activated because of the negated ability. A negate ability keeps the uncompleted activation of an ability from ever completingIt's perfectly fine to redefine negate but doing so doesn't necessarily make it less confusing or more consistent, because "any ability activated because of the negated ability" does not follow from "A negate ability takes a previously completed ability and undoes the effect of that ability".
QuoteOne more unnatural rule is the rule that cascade negate may negate the things that were a cascade result of a CBN ability. It seems more natural to understand that everything behind CBN would stay untouched from the cascade negate. So that's one of the rules that I've found hard to understand.I'm not sure where you heard this rule, but that is not the case. If a CBN ability is activated, it "sticks" and cannot be negated directly (by a negate card) or indirectly (cascade negated). Example: I attack with Tribal Elder and band to Abraham who searches deck for Isaac and bands to him (CBN). If you negate Tribal Elder, then Abraham leaves battle, but Isaac remains because he was banded in by a CBN ability.
One more unnatural rule is the rule that cascade negate may negate the things that were a cascade result of a CBN ability. It seems more natural to understand that everything behind CBN would stay untouched from the cascade negate. So that's one of the rules that I've found hard to understand.
Let's face it if your deck or hand are protected your opponent should not be able to manipulate them at all in any way(no return to, reveal, look, shuffle, take, underdeck, etc)I know there is some justification for the hypocrisy, its just a bad rule."Deck is protected from shuffle abilities" they play grapes and shuffle your protected deck. That is just a bad rule Deck and shuffle are in the same sentence it is a real stretch of the imagination to say deck isn't involved here it is in fact a variable of the ability Thematically if I have four living creatures or self control why in the world should I become hypocritical because of my opponents hypocrisy? Same goes for grapes I mean it makes sense if you want it to but if something is protected from your opponents cards this seems like a thin window of exploitation
Is target defined?
A shuffle ability targets the cards that are to be shuffled.
Right but a protected location is still included