When a creature with trample is blocked in Magic: The Gathering, it can assign excess damage to the defending player or planeswalker if it has enough power to destroy all blocking creatures.
The trample ability in Magic: The Gathering allows a creature to deal excess damage to a defending player or planeswalker if it has more power than is needed to destroy the blocking creature.
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 attacks a creature with protection in Magic: The Gathering, the attacking creature can assign excess damage to the defending player or planeswalker, bypassing the protected creature.
In Magic: The Gathering, trample allows excess damage from a creature to be dealt to the defending player or planeswalker if the creature's power is greater than the toughness of the creature blocking it. This can impact gameplay by making it harder for opponents to block and prevent damage, giving the player with trample an advantage in combat situations.
In Magic: The Gathering, trample protection prevents a creature from being dealt damage by a creature with trample if the damage would be lethal to the protected creature. This means that the protected creature will not take any excess damage beyond what is needed to destroy it.
In Magic: The Gathering, trample is a keyword ability that allows a creature to deal excess combat damage to the defending player or planeswalker if it has trample and its power is greater than the toughness of the creature blocking it. Trample affects gameplay by giving attacking creatures with high power the ability to deal damage beyond what is needed to destroy blocking creatures, potentially dealing more damage to the defending player or planeswalker.
In Magic: The Gathering, when you block multiple creatures with one, the blocking creature assigns its combat damage to each attacking creature it is blocking. The attacking creatures can divide their damage among the blocking creature as they choose.
When a creature with trample in Magic: The Gathering is blocked by multiple blockers, it only needs to assign lethal damage to each blocker before it can assign any excess damage to the defending player or planeswalker.
Yes, lifelink works in Magic: The Gathering when a creature with lifelink is blocking. When that creature deals combat damage, its controller gains life equal to the damage dealt.
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, in Magic: The Gathering, you tap your creatures to indicate that they are blocking an attacking creature.
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.