Sea Cucumbers.
In Magic: The Gathering, when a creature blocks multiple attackers, the defending player chooses how to assign the creature's combat damage among the attacking creatures. The creature can only deal damage equal to its power, and the defending player can decide how to distribute that damage among the attackers.
No, in Magic: The Gathering, one creature can only block one attacker at a time.
No, in Magic: The Gathering, each creature can only block one attacker at a time.
the gate !!
Appropriate collective nouns for attackers are a band of attackers, a gang of attackers, a group of attackers, etc.
Creatures with Flying may block creatures that don't. Note that in Magic, creatures do not 'attack directly' as such, they are declared as attackers, and then creatures may be declared to block them. The creature with Flying in this case, can block creatures with, and without Flying.
An 'attack' is what you do during the combat phase, you declare attackers by tapping them (or just declaring, if the creature has Vigilance) and these are now 'attacking monsters'.Tapping to use activated effects, even damage dealing ones, are not attackers, and the damage is not 'combat damage'.
In Magic: The Gathering, the keyword "blocking multiple creatures" allows a single creature to block more than one attacking creature during combat. This means that the blocking creature can prevent multiple attackers from dealing damage to the player or other creatures.
Attackers was created in 1996.
First your creatures name. Then where your creature lives. Then what your creature eats. Then tell what they like. Then tell what your creature did to you. Tip:Make it a made up creature.
Personally i think that the apatosaurus could not crush it attackers with its forelegs because the attackers would have to be miniscule.
They will be used to climb up the long walls of the stone castle by attackers