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Post by DNecaise on Jan 29, 2009 0:54:49 GMT -5
A few rules questions I’m not really sure so… 1. If you exhaust and have no deck; do you exhaust perpetua? A. Dirty Trick Choke all cards are underneath the choke-your opponent has no deck. B. I exhaust my deck on turn 1 and have no cards in my discard to draw. 2. Is a card which you put into play under your opponents control considered his card in play for card and trigger effects? 3. When you discard a card for effect you may do so on your opponents turn after he has played his first card. Correct? I know Nexus is this way but... 4. Card modifiers.. Katana plays a MA while you have a Plot & Situation in play making it UD/UB but on your turn you remove either the plot or Sit. Can you now play a block as normal or dodge as normal if you removed the offending (modifying) plot or sit? (You remove the modifying card so you may defend easier.) Or is the attack still UB/UD since when the attack was played it was modified? I hope all this made sense...
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Post by Thorr on Jan 29, 2009 9:50:26 GMT -5
1) Yes. You keep exhausting. 2) Yes 3) Yes 4) This one keeps changing, so I'll let the "experts" handle it.
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Post by DNecaise on Jan 29, 2009 14:22:29 GMT -5
1) Yes. You keep exhausting. 2) Yes 3) Yes 4) This one keeps changing, so I'll let the "experts" handle it. 1. When you reach 0 can you/or do you just stop exhausting? Or do you just sit there til Endgame/First Blood starts? 5. New Question... You focus( nullify) your opponents Watcher:rearm and you break your opponent's weapon. At the end of his turn til the start of your turn .. is there a 'gap' of time where your opponent 'rearms' or can you focus 'nullify' at the start of your turn to continually ignore the rearm? Basically, is there a gap of play time, where your opponent rearms and you must break his frakkin' weapon again? every turn (or police the watcher)
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Post by scottr on Jan 29, 2009 15:11:34 GMT -5
5. Your sweep phase is the point that your old focus ends its effect, so the question is if you begin your may do/must do phase with another focus (nullify), was there a time in between the sweep and that new focus in which the opponent rearmed with their continuous effect.
Personally I hope that there was a moment in there, but I don't see a really clear answer.
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Post by DNecaise on Jan 29, 2009 16:26:33 GMT -5
5. Your sweep phase is the point that your old focus ends its effect, so the question is if you begin your may do/must do phase with another focus (nullify), was there a time in between the sweep and that new focus in which the opponent rearmed with their continuous effect. Personally I hope that there was a moment in there, but I don't see a really clear answer. What you said. so what's the answer again?
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Post by Thorr on Jan 29, 2009 17:35:37 GMT -5
He'll re-arm as soon as you sweep the card. I don't see the point of this last question. The rules of the Watcher (re-arm) card are such that if at any time the card is active, both players are armed.
If you Focus (nullify) the Watcher and break his weapon, then he will be disarmed until you sweep the Focus. Once the card is swept, Your opponent is re-armed. Then you have to Focus again in order to try and break his weapon again.
I don't really see any reason for confusion on this...
Also note - These are Type One questions. They belong in the Type one forum. You throw around card names with the assumption that everyone simply -knows- which edition they are from. The DT: CHoke you refer to is the 1E version and not the 2E version. But, only veteran players are going to know that. This thread is being moved.
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Post by prowler7 on Jan 29, 2009 18:18:03 GMT -5
4. Card modifiers.. Katana plays a MA while you have a Plot & Situation in play making it UD/UB but on your turn you remove either the plot or Sit. Can you now play a block as normal or dodge as normal if you removed the offending (modifying) plot or sit? (You remove the modifying card so you may defend easier.) Or is the attack still UB/UD since when the attack was played it was modified? Since this is the one that was left open, I will grab it. A card that modifies another card but is removed from play, it no longer has its effect. So, in this case, as long as you remove the Plot or Situation before you attempt to play a defense, then it would no longer affect that attack. The same goes for cards that make an attack a Head Shot. If you remove that card from play it is no longer a Head Shot, but the attack remains a Power Blow (this is the one modifier that doesnt go away, once an attack is made a Power Blow, it stays).
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Post by DNecaise on Jan 29, 2009 19:47:51 GMT -5
4. Card modifiers.. Katana plays a MA while you have a Plot & Situation in play making it UD/UB but on your turn you remove either the plot or Sit. Can you now play a block as normal or dodge as normal if you removed the offending (modifying) plot or sit? (You remove the modifying card so you may defend easier.) Or is the attack still UB/UD since when the attack was played it was modified? Since this is the one that was left open, I will grab it. A card that modifies another card but is removed from play, it no longer has its effect. So, in this case, as long as you remove the Plot or Situation before you attempt to play a defense, then it would no longer affect that attack. The same goes for cards that make an attack a Head Shot. If you remove that card from play it is no longer a Head Shot, but the attack remains a Power Blow (this is the one modifier that doesnt go away, once an attack is made a Power Blow, it stays). Thanks makes sense. (Which is rare at times) Which is what I thought happened.
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Post by DNecaise on Jan 29, 2009 19:55:14 GMT -5
He'll re-arm as soon as you sweep the card. I don't see the point of this last question. The rules of the Watcher (re-arm) card are such that if at any time the card is active, both players are armed. If you Focus (nullify) the Watcher and break his weapon, then he will be disarmed until you sweep the Focus. Once the card is swept, Your opponent is re-armed. Then you have to Focus again in order to try and break his weapon again. I don't really see any reason for confusion on this... Also note - These are Type One questions. They belong in the Type one forum. You throw around card names with the assumption that everyone simply -knows- which edition they are from. The DT: CHoke you refer to is the 1E version and not the 2E version. But, only veteran players are going to know that. This thread is being moved. Well, it's a mix actually. The Katana Master's attack is type 2 Exhausting can be both formats As is the card under someone's control Don't really care where the questions are moved, as long as they are answered before it's trashed. ;D Didn't realize there were 2 rules areas. I'll try to specify from which Type in the future I was never confused. You also ask questions for clarity. A question is used for many things In research projects Descriptive question, used primarily to describe the existence of some thing or process. Relational question, designed to look at the relationships between two or more variables. Causal question, designed to determine whether one or more variables causes or affects one or more outcome variables In surveys (there are a few types of questions) Dichotomous questions, usually these questions require yes/no answers or require a person to answer by choosing an option(s) from a multiple choice of possible answers. Nominal questions, these types of questions are designed to inquire about a level of quantitative measure. Usually these questions form correlations between a number and a concept. For example: Occupational Class: 1= Moderate 2= Severe 3= etc. Qualifying questions (a.k.a. filter questions, or contingency questions) These types of questions are designed to determine if the individual answering the question needs to continue on to answer subsequential questions There's more but you get the picture, right? Any questions? ;D
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Post by Thorr on Jan 29, 2009 22:45:58 GMT -5
Point taken, but I still don't know what your #5 question was really looking for. I am assuming that there was an incorrect thought about how long the Focus is in effect. The card text combined with card type should answer that clearly.
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