The card "Counterspell" allows you to exile a target spell from the stack.
If a card's not a land, then it's a spell - a creature on the stack waiting to resolve is a 'creature spell', for example. You can use a 'counter target spell' card against creature spells, instants, artifact spells, etc, the only things you can't use it on are lands, or activated abilities.
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In Magic: The Gathering (MTG), the stack is a zone where spells and abilities are placed before they resolve. Players can respond to spells and abilities on the stack by playing their own spells or abilities. The last spell or ability put on the stack is the first to resolve. This allows for strategic gameplay and the opportunity to counter or disrupt your opponent's plays.
The summoner spell Rally no longer exists, having been remade into the summoner spell Surge. Rally did not stack while it existed.
In Magic: The Gathering, the stack is a zone where spells and abilities are placed before they resolve. When a player casts a spell or activates an ability, it goes on top of the stack. The last spell or ability put on the stack resolves first. Players can respond to spells and abilities on the stack by adding more spells or abilities. Once all players pass priority without adding anything to the stack, the top spell or ability resolves, and players can continue to resolve spells and abilities in order.
Yes - a spell is counted as cast, when it is 'cast' and goes on the stack. So if something triggers from a spell being cast, it will trigger right then and there, before the spell even resolves and before any counterspells can be placed on the stack.
"Pop" allows you to remove items off of the stack. The stack is an area in memory that contains the information of a program, such as function names and instructions, the values of variables, etc. The opposite of pop is "push". This allows you to add items to the stack.
No. Because it says 'Creature', it means something on the Battlefield. If you take Yavimaya Elves as an example, then these are; - A 'Creature Spell' when on the stack, being cast. This is where you'd use Remove Soul for example. - A 'Creature' when on the Battlefield. - A 'Creature Card' while in any other zone. This stops you using things like 'Dark Banishing' on a creature spell on the stack, or 'Path to Exile' on cards in the graveyard - they can only be used on 'Creatures', ie, one that has been successfully cast and is on the Battlefield.
It is a feature on a hopper that allows it to know if there are any paintballs in the feed stack (the tube that goes into the gun) and feeds them in automatically if there aren't.
No. Only spells in the stack (cast spells that hasn't resolved yet).
When using the counterspell card in Magic: The Gathering, you can cast it at any time during your opponent's turn to stop their spell from resolving. To use it, you need to have enough mana to pay its cost, and you must announce that you are casting it in response to your opponent's spell. The counterspell card specifically counters target spell, meaning it can only be used to counter spells that are currently on the stack.
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