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While damage is still on the stack, the player who controls that creature has the opportunity to respond to the 'ping' by using the sacrifice outlet or any other instant or ability, if they choose to.

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Q: In Magic The Gathering what happen if your creature ping one damage to a sacrifice creature which has a toughest of a one before it resolve?
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What is the definition of casting a creature in magic the gathering?

'Casting a creature spell' means to pay the mana cost and put the creature spell on the stack. If this is allowed to resolve, then the creature enters the Battlefield.


If you sacrifice a creature with the ability to return to your hand by paying mana can you sacrifice him then return him to your hand?

Not usually, no. It depends on a few things. If the creature's ability says that when it hits the graveyard, you can pay a cost to return it to hand, then that's fine. It doesn't matter if the sacrifice is a cost or effect, the creature can trigger as long as it doesn't specifically say it had to be destroyed (sacrificing is not a destruction effect). If the creature says something like "U: Return this creature to its owners hand", then these can never be both sacrificed and returned. If the sacrifice is a cost, then the creature is gone, it has left the field before you can activate the ability. It should be noted that a creature's abilities can only be activated in any other zone than the battlefield, if they specifically say they can. So this creature cannot activate its ability in the graveyard. If the sacrifice is an effect, then it can activate its ability in response. It will return to hand first, then if the sacrifice effect was untargeted, it will make you sacrifice something else when it resolves (it never 'selected' the first monster originally) or fail to resolve, depending on the exact wording.


When you cast flash can you respond using that creature's ability before you have to sacrifice the creature?

Normally, no, there is nothing to respond to. You resolve all parts of Flash's effect before you can put anything else on the stack. But if you want to pay the cost you can use the creature's mana abilities to pay for it, assuming it has haste or does not need to tap, mana abilities do not use the stack and can be used during the resolution of an effect.


If a creature uses an ability then while the ability is still on the stack the creature is destroyed does the ability still resolve?

Yes, it will resolve unless it's obvious it still needs the creature to be in play - destroying 'Hedron Crab' after its Landfall trigger goes on the stack will not stop the resolution. However if you destroy 'Scute Mob' before its trigger can resolve, clearly the effect will do nothing as the 'Scute Mob' is no longer in play to receive the +1/+1 tokens.


Would Creature Swap work on an Evilswarm monster if Infestation Pandemic chains to it in Yu-Gi-Oh?

Creature Swap's effect will not resolve if the Evilswarm's affected by Pandemic, so no.


Can you counter a creature with a card that reads counter target spell?

If a card's not a land, then it's a spell - a creature on the stack waiting to resolve is a 'creature spell', for example. You can use a 'counter target spell' card against creature spells, instants, artifact spells, etc, the only things you can't use it on are lands, or activated abilities.


What does the stack in Magic the Gathering mean?

In Magic the Gathering, the 'stack' is the imaginary area where spells and abilities go when they are cast/played, and are waiting to resolve. So say one player casts a Lightning Bolt, targeting one of his opponent's creatures. He pays the mana cost and the spell goes on the 'stack'. The opponent however to save his creature, responds to this by casting 'Giant Growth' on that same creature. The stack goes by 'LIFO' order - last in, first out. It means that the latest object to go on the stack, will be the first to resolve. So Giant Growth will resolve first, and then Lightning Bolt. But say if Player A had some kind of counterspell, he could place that on the stack above Giant Growth to counter it and remove it from the stack, meaning ultimately the creature will die to Lightning Bolt. Tapping permanents to generate mana (be they land or anything else that can do it), a 'mana ability', does not use the stack, it is uninterruptable so can't generally be countered. Morphing, flipping a face-down Morph creature face-up, also does not use the stack, so a Morph cannot be quickly dispatched once the intention to flip is known. The stack can be interrupted as it resolves. Imagine a stack with objects A, B and C on it. When C resolves, either player might feel the need to play something else, so this will become object D on the stack above A and B, and will resolve before them.


Can 'Master Apothecary' prevent damage from 'Pyroclasm' in Magic the Gathering?

Yes, it can protect a creature or player from an indirect source of damage, such as Pyroclasm. So when Pyroclasm is put on the stack, you add Master Apothecary's ability to it, choosing the target. You may do this as many times as you want, and have untapped Clerics to pay the cost with. Then each ability will resolve, setting up a condition on those targets to prevent the next two damage they would be dealt. Finally Pyroclasm will resolve - all creatures will take 2 damage, but those that Master Apothecary used his effect on, will prevent it.


Can monstrosity be used more then once in magic the gathering?

Yes...BUT, Monstrosity's text specifically says 'If this creature isn't monstrous', so if you tried to use it for a second time, it would have no effect. Take Arbor Colossus, which has 3GGG: Monstrosity 3. If you play that ability once, it will become monstrous and gain three +1/+1 counters. If you tried to play it again, it will see it is already monstrous and will not give any more counters. Even if you activated it twice on the same stack, the first will resolve and make the creature monstrous, meaning the second will fail even though the creature was not monstrous when both abilities were played. However, with the wording of the question in mind, yes, you are allowed to 'use' the ability multiple times, nothing stops you playing the monstrous ability even if it will have no effect when it resolves.


What part of speech is resolve?

Resolve can be a verb or a noun. As a verb: Please resolve the problem by the end of this month. As a noun: The information, instead of stopping her, strengthened her resolve.


What parts of speech is resolve?

Resolve is a noun. It describes an action.


How can you use the word resolve in sentence?

Resolve the question on the board.