When an effect is able to change another effect's target, the new target must still be a legal one. Terror cannot target a Black creature, so Willbender would be unable to change Terror's target in this case.
You can use the ability "regenerate target creature" to protect your creatures from being destroyed in combat or by spells by activating the ability in response to the destruction effect. This allows the creature to avoid being destroyed and remain on the battlefield.
In Magic: The Gathering, creatures mutate by combining with other creatures to create a new, more powerful creature with combined abilities and characteristics. This process involves casting a creature with the mutate ability on top of another creature on the battlefield, resulting in a mutated creature with a mix of both creatures' traits.
If a creature has Intimidate, when it attacks, it can only be blocked by creatures that share a colour with it, or artifact creatures.
The ability of "first strike" allows a creature to deal damage before creatures without this ability. When blocking multiple creatures, a creature with first strike can potentially eliminate one or more attackers before they can deal damage back, giving it an advantage in combat.
Yes, "Changeling" is a creature type in Magic: The Gathering. Changeling creatures have the ability to take on the characteristics of any creature type.
In the game of Magic: The Gathering, the ability "can't be blocked" means that a creature with this ability cannot be blocked by other creatures when attacking. This allows the creature to deal damage directly to the opponent without being stopped by any defending creatures.
No, shapeshifters are not limited to a specific creature type. They have the ability to change their form and appearance, allowing them to mimic various creatures.
Yes, "Mutate" is a keyword ability in Magic: The Gathering that allows players to combine creatures into a single, more powerful creature.
When you activate the ability "draw a card for each creature you control," you draw a number of cards equal to the total number of creatures you control.
Yes, the ability "indestructible" prevents a creature from being destroyed by effects that specifically say "destroy."
You can't attack an opponent's creature directly. you attack your opponent directly with your creatures. It's up to them to decide whether or not to block. The exception to this is if one of your creatures has the Provoke ability which means you can force another creature to block it.
No because it cannot target the creature. Read the hexproof ability