Walls (or these days, creatures with Defender) cannot innately block a creature with any kind of evasion like Flying. Only if the Wall has something like Flying, or Reach, can it block a Flying attacker.
No, creatures do not tap when they block.
No, in Magic: The Gathering, one creature can only block one attacker at a time.
Frame a wall next to the block wall to run your pipes in. You might even consider bringing the wall out away from the Block wall if you are not tight on footage.
To counter a powerful creature like MTG Wall of Fog in Magic: The Gathering, players can use removal spells, cards that can destroy or exile the creature. They can also use cards that can prevent the creature from attacking or blocking, such as cards with abilities like flying or trample. Additionally, players can use cards that can reduce the creature's power and toughness, making it easier to deal with.
Yes, in a game of Magic: The Gathering, you have to tap a creature to use it to block an attacking creature.
There are many flying walls that use white mana. Wall of Denial, Wall of Reverence, Sunweb, Wall of Shards, Angelic Wall, Wall of Swords, Ageless Sentinels.
Yes, in Magic: The Gathering, you can block with multiple creatures during the combat phase. Each creature can block one attacking creature, and the defending player can choose how to assign blockers.
A block of rock above a fault is called the hanging wall. In a fault, the hanging wall is the block of rock that is positioned above the fault plane, while the block below the fault is called the footwall.
A flying buttress is a form of buttressing most strongly associated with Gothic church architecture. Flying buttress systems compose of two parts including a massive vertical masonry block on the outside of a building and a segmental or quadrant arch bridging the gap between the buttress and the wall.
the abbreviation is mtg
The hanging wall is the upper block in a fault where movement has occurred, while the footwall is the lower block that has not moved. The hanging wall moves over the footwall in response to stress within the Earth's crust.
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.