Lets say I casts Huntmaster of the Fells then pass the turn.
My opponent then casts his own Huntmaster, and passes the turn back.
I pass the turn back, making the Huntmasters transform.
He has priority so his trigger goes onto the stack first, then mine goes onto the stack. (This is correct, right?)
After his transforms he targets my Huntmaster, in response I cast Restoration Angel targeting my Huntmaster and "flickering"/"blinking" it.
My question is does my Huntmaster still transform when it returns from the "flickering"/"blinking"?
You are correct that his goes on the stack first, but it looks as if you are confused about how the stack resolves.
His Huntmaster's flip trigger goes on the stack first, and yours goes above it, So yours will resolve first, because the stack resolves top to bottom, or First in, Last out.
So your Huntmaster will flip before his does, making it so you can even kill his with the Ravager trigger before his flips.
Also, if you blink the Huntmaster before it flips, it will not flip when it comes back in, as it's a new object with no memory of it's previous existence.
Lets say I casts Huntmaster of the Fells then pass the turn.
My opponent then casts his own Huntmaster, and passes the turn back.
I pass the turn back, making the Huntmasters transform.
He has priority so his trigger goes onto the stack first, then mine goes onto the stack. (This is correct, right?)
After his transforms he targets my Huntmaster, in response I cast Restoration Angel targeting my Huntmaster and "flickering"/"blinking" it.
My question is does my Huntmaster still transform when it returns from the "flickering"/"blinking"?
Triggers are put onto the stack in active player-non active player order, APNP. So you were right, his goes on the stack first, and yours last. Which means yours will transform first (the stack uses a first in last out order for resolving triggers, spells, and abilities) to kill his Huntmaster of the Fells.
You do not need to blink your Huntmaster, which would not transform after it reenters the battlefield.
I use the Duels Of The Planeswalkers layout, though I'm right-handed and keep my deck and GY to the left. I dare you to ask me how tempting it is to hold flying creatures in a floating pattern over the table.
first, if his trigger goes to the stack first, it resolves last (stack resolves in first in last out order)
second, lets suppose that instead of trying to kill your huntamster with his, he tries to kill your huntmaster with pillar of flame (because I already stated that his huntmaster transforms last) then, blinking the huntmaster causes it to not transform (because its a new object without memory of what it was before)
edit: triple nath'd
My opponent then casts his own Huntmaster, and passes the turn back.
I pass the turn back, making the Huntmasters transform.
He has priority so his trigger goes onto the stack first, then mine goes onto the stack. (This is correct, right?)
After his transforms he targets my Huntmaster, in response I cast Restoration Angel targeting my Huntmaster and "flickering"/"blinking" it.
My question is does my Huntmaster still transform when it returns from the "flickering"/"blinking"?
His Huntmaster's flip trigger goes on the stack first, and yours goes above it, So yours will resolve first, because the stack resolves top to bottom, or First in, Last out.
So your Huntmaster will flip before his does, making it so you can even kill his with the Ravager trigger before his flips.
Also, if you blink the Huntmaster before it flips, it will not flip when it comes back in, as it's a new object with no memory of it's previous existence.
When your huntsmaster trigger comes to resolve it will not be able to find the creature that triggered the ability so it will resolve but do nothing.
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Triggers are put onto the stack in active player-non active player order, APNP. So you were right, his goes on the stack first, and yours last. Which means yours will transform first (the stack uses a first in last out order for resolving triggers, spells, and abilities) to kill his Huntmaster of the Fells.
You do not need to blink your Huntmaster, which would not transform after it reenters the battlefield.
second, lets suppose that instead of trying to kill your huntamster with his, he tries to kill your huntmaster with pillar of flame (because I already stated that his huntmaster transforms last) then, blinking the huntmaster causes it to not transform (because its a new object without memory of what it was before)
edit: triple nath'd
Anyways, thanks for your replies everyone.