Man, my favourite card has to be Static Orb. My playgroup started getting too competitive and building expensive combo decks, so I put my own spin on the old "Orbisition" deck and built a $15 control deck that put a hard lock on the board until everybody conceded.
Needless to say, it curbed the power creep.
To be clear, when a creature's rules text reads "When [CARDNAME] enters the battlefield," it means "When this enters the battlefield," and has no regard for other cards of the same name. In the instance of Tajuru Archer, it would still trigger when another one came into play, but this would be because of the "...or another Ally..." in the first line rather than the mention of its name.
Player A has a Servant of the Scale with a single counter on it and a Dragon Hunter. He attacks with the Servant and I block on a Shambling Goblin. The creatures trade and each one has an ability trigger.
What I thought was that it would be an APNAP situation: it's Player A's turn so he's the active player, so the Servant goes on the stack and then the non-active player's triggers are put on next, the way something like Hive Mind would work. (The goal being to use the Goblin's trigger to kill the Hunter before it's pumped.) But the judge said that the active player gets to choose the order of all the simultaneous triggers in this case regardless of who controls them. Could somebody break down the reason for this and why and how the rules differ compared to other types of situations?