I see. So if the card is cast from the graveyard, it's first in the graveyard, then in the stack, so when it enters the battlefield it came from the stack, not the graveyard?
As the title implies, I have a question about Flayer of the Hatebound. The rulings say that if a creature card is /cast/ from the graveyard (for whatever reason), then Flayer's ability does not go off. Maybe I'm reading too much into this, but the specific ruling also takes time to mention that the cast creature goes on the stack, which to me says this is related.
Here's the full text:
If you cast a creature card from your graveyard, that card will be put on the stack before entering the battlefield. Flayer of the Hatebound won't trigger.
Would anyone be able to explain this to me? A creature with Undying would set off Flayer's ability, but the undying trigger goes on the stack in the same manner a creature that is cast would. Why is there a difference?
Also, would a creature brought to the battlefield from my graveyard with Teneb, the Harvester cause Flayer's ability to trigger?
I apologize if this has been said, but I almost want to see Avacyn be a white Angel that flips into Griselbrand, a black demon. And the card has to be epic beyond that.
Flesh 2:symu::symu:
Instant (R)
Cancel target creature spell, put a 1/1 illusion creature token onto the battlefield.
Hello! I'm new to this so my idea probably needs a bit of work. First, I wanted to do something other than black since so many people have already (and it works, I just wanted to try something different). So my thoughts behind flesh were to take the flesh of an opponents creature and mold it into something different. This seemed very blue to me, so the resulting token should be an illusion creature. I'm not sure if the mana cost is fitting for the effects though.
Thank you!
Here's the full text:
If you cast a creature card from your graveyard, that card will be put on the stack before entering the battlefield. Flayer of the Hatebound won't trigger.
Would anyone be able to explain this to me? A creature with Undying would set off Flayer's ability, but the undying trigger goes on the stack in the same manner a creature that is cast would. Why is there a difference?
Also, would a creature brought to the battlefield from my graveyard with Teneb, the Harvester cause Flayer's ability to trigger?
Thanks,
~Celestial
::sneaks back out::
Instant (R)
Cancel target creature spell, put a 1/1 illusion creature token onto the battlefield.
Hello! I'm new to this so my idea probably needs a bit of work. First, I wanted to do something other than black since so many people have already (and it works, I just wanted to try something different). So my thoughts behind flesh were to take the flesh of an opponents creature and mold it into something different. This seemed very blue to me, so the resulting token should be an illusion creature. I'm not sure if the mana cost is fitting for the effects though.