So I had a Battlewise Hoplite and Triton Fortune Hunter out. When I attacked, I activated a Dauntless Onlaught and targeted both creatures. Here's my confusion.
One creature's ability includes scry and the other to draw a card. Since I targeted both at the same time, which ability do I use first? Is it my choice or is there a way this is supposed to go?
To finish your situation, you place both abilities on the stack. Usually, you'd want to scry before drawing, so you'd put triton's ability on the stack first, and then the hoplite's ability.
So I had a Battlewise Hoplite and Triton Fortune Hunter out. When I attacked, I activated a Dauntless Onlaught and targeted both creatures. Here's my confusion.
One creature's ability includes scry and the other to draw a card. Since I targeted both at the same time, which ability do I use first? Is it my choice or is there a way this is supposed to go?
Since you control both triggers and they both triggered on the same event, you will be able to choose the order they will go on the stack.
I also wanted to just correct some of your terminology. You don't "activate" a Dauntless Onslaught, you cast it. Spells are cast, abilities are either triggered or activated. In this case, the Heroic Ability is a triggered ability. Activated abilities are always in the format of COST:EFFECT. <--- the colon( : ) is the dead giveaway for that
One creature's ability includes scry and the other to draw a card. Since I targeted both at the same time, which ability do I use first? Is it my choice or is there a way this is supposed to go?
Thanks!
Battlewise Hoplite
Triton Fortune Hunter
Dauntless Onlaught
Since you control both triggers and they both triggered on the same event, you will be able to choose the order they will go on the stack.
I also wanted to just correct some of your terminology. You don't "activate" a Dauntless Onslaught, you cast it. Spells are cast, abilities are either triggered or activated. In this case, the Heroic Ability is a triggered ability. Activated abilities are always in the format of COST:EFFECT. <--- the colon( : ) is the dead giveaway for that