A creature with shroud cannot be targeted by instants, sorceries, or any other spells or abilities that target. However instants such as Evacuation will affect the creature because the spell does not target.
In Magic: The Gathering, hexproof means a creature can't be targeted by spells or abilities your opponents control. Shroud means a creature can't be targeted by any spells or abilities, including your own.
A permanent with shroud cannot be the target of spells or abilities.
An indestructible creature in Magic: The Gathering can protect itself from a board wipe effect by having abilities that grant it protection from certain types of spells or effects, or by being able to regenerate or return from the graveyard. Additionally, having a way to give the creature hexproof or shroud can also help protect it from being targeted by board wipe effects.
Liesa, the Shroud of Dusk in Magic: The Gathering has the forgotten archangel rulings that allow players to pay life instead of mana for certain spells and abilities.
Not if the spell or ability calls for you to target that permanent, shroud will prevent you targeting it, even if it's you own creature. However, effects that don't call for a target can get around this such as 'Choose a creature', 'Whenever a creature', 'Target player sacrifices a creature' or any effect which works én massé with the word 'all' such as Wrath of God. Examples: Graft, Wrath of God, Conspiracy, Overrun, Diabolic Edict These examples would all still affect a creature with shroud.
If a card doesn't say it targets, then it does not target. Windstorm does not target at all, so it will affect even creatures with Shroud. Cards that pick multiple targets will still mention the word target.
In Magic: The Gathering, shroud prevents a permanent from being targeted by spells or abilities, including its controller's. Hexproof, on the other hand, only prevents the permanent from being targeted by spells or abilities controlled by opponents.
In Magic: The Gathering, Hexproof prevents a creature or player from being targeted by spells or abilities controlled by opponents, while Shroud prevents a creature or player from being targeted by any spells or abilities, including those controlled by its controller. The key difference is that Hexproof only protects against opponent's spells and abilities, while Shroud protects against all spells and abilities. This impacts gameplay strategies as creatures with Hexproof can still be targeted by their controller's spells and abilities, allowing for more strategic use of buffs and protections. On the other hand, creatures with Shroud are completely immune to all spells and abilities, including their controller's, making them harder to interact with but also limiting the ways they can be enhanced or protected.
No, Insurrection does target any creatures as it does not contain the word target. So insurrection can still effect cards that have shroud or Protection from Red.
Scattershot is a targeting card. Creatures with Shroud cannot be selected as targets, so the storm copies of Scattershot can't select them, they will have to pick legal targets instead. But if you meant Scattershot Archer, the flyers will take damage even if they have shroud. Scattershot Archers ability does not target the creatures so shroud makes no difference.
The Lethifold, also known as the Living Shroud, is classified as a XXXXX-level creature, which is known as a known wizard killer and impossible to train or domesticate. They are considered extremely dangerous and can suffocate their victims while feeding on them.
we sailed into a shroud of fog. we watched as his body was wrapped in a shroud and buried.