Hello, I've been wanting to build a jank deck with an opponent conceding win-con and needed to know what exactly I can target Role Reversal with to minimize the amount of turns it would take to win.
Specifically,
If I control Experimental Frenzy and my opponent controls a creature with Sunbond, would I be able to give them control of my Frenzy because the Sunbond shares the Enchantment card type? If so, how would me controlling the creature's aura work exactly... out of curiosity.
The main goal in the end is to just give them the Frenzy and slap a Grafdigger's Cage on the field
Role Reversal can target Experimental Frenzy and Sunbond together since they share a "permanent type", namely enchantment (C.R. 110.4).
If you gain control of an Aura like Sunbond from another player, you don't also thereby gain control of whatever that Aura is attached to. This is because an "Aura's controller is separate from the enchanted object's controller or the enchanted player; the two need not be the same" (C.R. 303.4e). Sunbond grants an ability to the creature it enchants, and because that creature's controller is unchanged, the "you" on that ability refers not necessarily to you, but to that creature's controller (C.R. 109.5).
Specifically,
If I control Experimental Frenzy and my opponent controls a creature with Sunbond, would I be able to give them control of my Frenzy because the Sunbond shares the Enchantment card type? If so, how would me controlling the creature's aura work exactly... out of curiosity.
The main goal in the end is to just give them the Frenzy and slap a Grafdigger's Cage on the field
If you gain control of an Aura like Sunbond from another player, you don't also thereby gain control of whatever that Aura is attached to. This is because an "Aura's controller is separate from the enchanted object's controller or the enchanted player; the two need not be the same" (C.R. 303.4e). Sunbond grants an ability to the creature it enchants, and because that creature's controller is unchanged, the "you" on that ability refers not necessarily to you, but to that creature's controller (C.R. 109.5).