Creatures and artifact creatures have summoning sickness. Artifacts and creatures with haste do not have summoning sickness
Summoning Sickness stops a creature from attacking, and prevents it from tapping as the cost of an activated ability that uses the tap symbol. Non-tap abilities are not affected by summoning sickness. They can be tapped for the cost of abilities that do not use the tap symbol (such as that of Gilt-Leaf Archdruid).
Yep, just as long as he didn't have summoning sickness before flipping.
Defending creatures deal damage to an attacking creature's toughness when they block equal to their power. It's called 'blocking', not 'attacking back'. Summoning sickness has no affect on blocking. Summoning sickness is the inability of a creature to use tap (tap symbol) abilities or attack until the next turn of the owner who summoned it.
Creatures are not brought into play tapped, but they have summoning sickness preventing them from tapping to attack or to tap to activate any abilities unless they have the keyword "haste".
No, of course not. Summoning Sickness stops a creature from attacking or using an ability with a Tap symbol as a cost. It does not stop it from being tapped by other effects, or for certain costs which require a tap, but do not use the Tap symbol (they can be used for Convoke for example) and they are certainly not destroyed if they end up tapped.
The first release of Magic the Gathering cards was on August 5, 1993.
You can not. They are not part of Magic the Gathering.
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A lot
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nerdy kids and card shops?