It doesn't matter who 'owns' the monster, all that matters is the current controller. If I steal your monster, and attack your other weaker monster with it, it's you who takes the damage because 'your' monster is 'mine' at the moment, no different to my other monsters. If you attack the stolen monster with a stronger one, the same applies, I control the weaker monster, so I take the damage.
It has ended up on the forbidden list for Yu-Gi-Oh because it is valuable for duelists who want to control opponents monsters and use them as a sacrifice to summon their higher level monsters. It only costs the duelist 800 life points which is worth gambling because if their opponent controls only 1 monster and it gets targeted by Brain Control then the control of the duel could change and the Brain Control user can attack the life points directly after stealing their opponents only monster. This is why it's forbidden and it is certain it will stay there until the card is not used as much in tournaments.
normally it has 4k atk and def points, but obelisk has the ability to sacrifice 2 monsters to make its atk points infinite and destroying all of the opponents monsters at the same time
For every dragon type monster on the field it gains 500 attack points
besombrely the dark and attack the egg and lose 200 points then sacrifice it then play ancient gear beast and attack with 3900 points but if that did not work play invasion of the flames
You cannot manually. Such an occurence could only result from a card effect.
Yes. If your monster is in attack position and you attack a monster that has more attack points than yours, your monster is destroyed and you take Battle Damage to your Life Points equal to the difference between your opponent's monster's Attack Points and your monster's Attack Points.
Of course not. You cannot declare an attack on the opponent's lifepoints if they have a monster, unless one of your monsters has an effect that allows it to attack directly.You'll just have to deal with their monster using Spells or Traps, a monster effect, or by boosting the ATK of one of your monsters.
Your monster is destroyed if the monster you attack is in attack position, and you lose life points.
You take damage from the attacking monsters attack points subtracted from your attacking monsters attack points. If your monsters in defence then no damage is take unless the opponents monster has a penetration effect like Flame Wing-Man.
It has ended up on the forbidden list for Yu-Gi-Oh because it is valuable for duelists who want to control opponents monsters and use them as a sacrifice to summon their higher level monsters. It only costs the duelist 800 life points which is worth gambling because if their opponent controls only 1 monster and it gets targeted by Brain Control then the control of the duel could change and the Brain Control user can attack the life points directly after stealing their opponents only monster. This is why it's forbidden and it is certain it will stay there until the card is not used as much in tournaments.
No. not unless the effect of either monster says you can, but usually, no.
the monster still gets the bonus of attack points hope this helps!
no it goes back to its original attack points and you get delt the attack points as damage too
the winged dragon's attack and defense points are the sum total of the monster's sacrificed to summon it
The Winged Dragon of Ra's attack power depends on what monsters you sacrifice, it's attack and defense becomes the added total of all the monster's attack and defensive points that you sacrificed.
Firstly..it's spelt ra..and seondly...ra's attack points are equal to the combined total of the three monster used to truibute. You can decrease your lifpoints to one, and give the rest to ra, and you can truibute monster to give ra their attack points.
other yugioh cards monster the higher attack points the better