Yes, trample allows a creature's excess damage to go through to the defending player or planeswalker even if the creature being blocked is indestructible.
When an indestructible creature with trample attacks and is blocked, it can assign excess damage to the defending player or planeswalker. This means that even if the blocking creatures can't be destroyed by the trample damage, the excess damage can still go through to the player or planeswalker.
Yes, trample allows a creature to deal excess combat damage to the defending player or planeswalker if the blocker is indestructible.
If multiple creatures block a creature with trample, the attacking player assigns damage to the blocking creatures equal to the power of the attacking creature. Ex. A creature with power 10 and trample attacks. You block with 4 creatures. The attacking player may assign the 10 damage as he/she chooses among the blocking creatures. If any damage is still left over, that would go through to you, the defending player. Note: The attacking creature will take damage equal to the combined power of all blocking creatures.
No, trample does not allow a creature to go through protection. Protection prevents damage, enchanting, blocking, and targeting from certain sources, but trample only affects damage dealt during combat.
No, trample does not allow a creature to go over protection. Protection prevents damage, enchanting, blocking, and targeting from certain sources, but trample only deals with excess damage after the blocking creature is destroyed.
None of yo BISOW. go on another website :D
In Magic: The Gathering, protection prevents a creature from being targeted, dealt damage, enchanted/equipped, or blocked by sources of a specified color or type. Trample allows excess damage from a creature's attack to be dealt to the defending player or planeswalker. When a creature with trample attacks a creature with protection from the attacking creature's color or type, the trample damage is prevented and does not go through to the defending player or planeswalker.
When a creature with trample attacks a creature with protection in Magic: The Gathering, the attacking creature's excess damage can still be dealt to the defending player or planeswalker. Protection prevents damage, enchanting, blocking, and targeting from sources of the specified color or type, but trample allows excess damage to go through to the defending player or planeswalker if the blocking creature is destroyed.
When a creature with trample and deathtouch attacks or blocks in Magic: The Gathering, it only needs to assign 1 damage to each blocker before assigning excess damage to the defending player or planeswalker. The deathtouch ability means that any amount of damage dealt by the creature is enough to destroy another creature, making it easier for the trample damage to go through to the player or planeswalker.
no at his shoulder !! if u walk in front he may trample you !!
Yes, that is the process you go through when going to the creature creator and breeding in-game.
actually, its not only two creatures... reptiles, fish, and single celled organisms never sleep but they might go through times where they are inactive