The thread I wanted to post this in seems to be gone, so I will post it here. I just want to make sure I am right, read:
Wallace taps Urza's Tower
Wallace taps Urza's Power Plant
Wallace taps Island
Wallace plays Mindslaver from Hand
<Careta> play it
Careta taps Boseiju, Who Shelters All
Wallace plays Mindslaver from Hand
Careta plays Krosan Grip from Hand
<Wallace> k, well I will activate it without passing
<Careta> have split
<Wallace> I know, I can activate the ability after I play the spell
<Wallace> before I pass
<Wallace> I have 1st priority after spell resolves
<Careta> minds dead
<Wallace> no it's not
<Careta> i think
<Careta> why ?
<Wallace> I have 1st priority
<Wallace> I cast it, then after it resolves I activate it before I pass priority
<Careta> no
<Wallace> I know how this works, happens all the time
Careta sacrifices Krosan Grip
<Careta> blah
<Wallace> after a spell resolves you retain priority, no?
<Careta> no
<Wallace> ...
<Player Lost>
So I get 1st priority, after Mindslaver resolves right, he won't have a chance to grip it?
Whenever a spells/ability is played, the player who played the spell/ability gains priority
Whenever a spell/ability resolved priority is given to the active player
so yes, mindslaving him, without giving him the chance to grip, is possible. However, it's possible to 'cheat' with this so I would recommend saying that you want to break it right away before giving your opponent a chance to play the grip. If you don't announce you want to retain priority the situation could get ugly...
Level 1 DCI Judge
Just a question, cant he Krosan in response to you activating the Mindslaver in which you're screwed for using it?
I havent been playing again seriously since all this Priority stuff came into effect so I'm still new to it. Bear with me :)
No because I have to sacrifice Slaver as part of the activation. There would be no reason to so though, the trigger would still go on the stack and resolve after you Grip.
Example:
Grindstone reads:
T; Target player puts the top 2 cards of there library into there graveyard...yada, yada,yada...
So if you Grip the Stone in resp. to the activation, stone would be destroyed, then you would mill your top 2.
Ah interesting, But if you Milled on their turn, they can Grip in response and it will destroy before? Just trying to straighten out this priority business haha
Yeh, they fixed this with the 6th Edition Rules.
Not really. During your main phase, you have priority. If you cast Mindslaver, and your opponent says "It resolves", you get priority back. You can sit there all day long (not literally, of course) and he cannot cast a spell.so yes, mindslaving him, without giving him the chance to grip, is possible. However, it's possible to 'cheat' with this so I would recommend saying that you want to break it right away before giving your opponent a chance to play the grip. If you don't announce you want to retain priority the situation could get ugly...
However, if you, say, wish to enter your attack phase, you pass priority at the end of your main phase.
Last edited by KrzyMoose; 08-23-2008 at 09:16 PM.
hence I included the word 'recommend' in there, it's awefull for a judge (assuming you're in a tournament) to hear a nice story about player A saying he didn't give priority to his/her opponent because he was thinking what to do and player B claiming he had priority because his/her opponent was iddling for about a minute without stating he would keep priority himself. A situation unable for a judge to verify just by himself (god I love spectators every once in a while).
Level 1 DCI Judge
Claiming this would be useless, since being idle for a long time may mean you get warned for Slow Play, but not that you are assumed to pass priority.
Player B would have to lie and say that you said 'go' or something. However, if your opponent is prepared to flat-out make up stuff like that, there are bigger problems to come ("He said he was Wasting my Volcanic, then changed his mind and tried to take it back and hit Tropical instead!").
YOU'RE GIVING ME A TIME MACHINE IN ORDER TO TREAT MY SLEEP DISORDER.
I can't think of a reason B would be allowed to play a spell there; if A hasn't done anything for a minute he would still have priority and B would have no grounds.
A more interesting case: at a recent PTQ, my opponent cast Incindiary Command to murder all creatures. For about ten seconds, I looked at him and he looked at me. Then I said "okay." and binned my creatures. At this point, my opponent realized he had forgotten to use his Fulminator Mage to kill one of my lands. Ruling was because I gave him so long to respond to his own spell before letting it resolve that he was out of luck.
When in doubt, mumble.
When in trouble, delegate.
I do not know if such a shortcut rule exists IRL (it doesn't make much sense, IMO, since "Ok?" after playing a spell comes automatically to tournament players), but assuming you are correct, it would still not be very relevant to the example at hand.
There is a huge difference between getting priority after you play a spell or ability, where in 99% of cases you want to just pass priority and see if it resolves, and getting priority after a spell or ability resolves, where you'd basically only pass priority if you want to move to the next step in the turn.
YOU'RE GIVING ME A TIME MACHINE IN ORDER TO TREAT MY SLEEP DISORDER.
Yea wow I was thinking of the fact of being able to play multiple spells or abilities in a row. Active player absolutely gains priority after resolving a spell or ability though. Edited above
ok so Krosan Gripping a Pernicious Deed in response to it going off does nothing? And Deed still kills what it is supposed to?
Oh also, What if My opponent is changing Phases going from Main to Attack per se, and I Krosan Grip the Deed at end of Main phase(priority is passed to me) the Grip will kill deed so it cant go off since it has Split Second?
But if my opponent Pops the Deed and I respond with Grip, the deed still goes off?
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