I played polymorphous rush choosing a coiling oracle and striving once to target one creature for each opponent. One of my opponents killed the coiling oracle. When the spell resolves, does the Polymorphous Rush still turn the targets into Oracles ot does the spell no longer see it.
I recently was playing in an edh deck and my opponent has a sen's triplets in play and played approach of the second sun from my hand. On a later turn, he managed to play it again. Does this cause him to win the game?
The new card Saryth, Viper's Fang got me excited as an addition to deathtouch strategies, but it occured to me that there is a more creative way to use her ability, if all works as I think it does. In the instance of a creature with a Tap ability, such as the aforementioned Goblin Sharpshooter, the ability is placed on the stack waiting to resolve, and Saryth now sees a tapped creature and grants deathtouch. The damage ability now resolves and deals the damage to target creature from a source with deathtouch. With Sharpshooter, this allows him to essentially machine gun his way through just about any creature on the field. Does this work as I think it does or am I way off base?
I was looking at Gomazoa's ability and was curious about whether or not I would be able to save it and still shuffle my opponent's creature(s) away. The thought I had was that I would block with the Zoa, activate its ability, then while its on the stack hit it with an effect like Momentary Blink.
Would this effectively shuffle away the blocked creature(s) or would it negate the effect? My gut feeling is that the ability would be checked on resolution and see that Zoa is no longer actually blocking the creature and it would have no effect, but I'm not at all certain of this.
I'm in the middle of brewing a card draw matters deck and I came across a possible combination that I'm not certain will work. The scenario is something like this: I have Thassa, Deep Dwelling and Toothy, Imaginary Friend with 3 +1/+1 counters on it. At my end step, I choose to bounce the Toothy.
My question is this: Does the ability of Toothy remain on the stack unresolved until Thassa has brought the Toothy back or does the Toothy ability resolve first? I'd like to know, as its quite beneficial for Toothy to return first as he would see his own trigger resolve, getting the +1/+1 counters back for drawing those cards.
Would this effectively shuffle away the blocked creature(s) or would it negate the effect? My gut feeling is that the ability would be checked on resolution and see that Zoa is no longer actually blocking the creature and it would have no effect, but I'm not at all certain of this.
My question is this: Does the ability of Toothy remain on the stack unresolved until Thassa has brought the Toothy back or does the Toothy ability resolve first? I'd like to know, as its quite beneficial for Toothy to return first as he would see his own trigger resolve, getting the +1/+1 counters back for drawing those cards.
I appreciate the help