I have nobs question - can deadly character (Grey Wind) kill Renly Barateon with deadly keyword (Renly has Immunity keyword)?
And another question: is mulligan - an official rule. In coreset rulebook I can not find it.
I have nobs question - can deadly character (Grey Wind) kill Renly Barateon with deadly keyword (Renly has Immunity keyword)?
And another question: is mulligan - an official rule. In coreset rulebook I can not find it.
Alatarfun said:
Deady is a keyword. Keywords are not considered character abilities. So no, Reny is not immune to Deadly and can be killed by it.
Alatarfun said:
There is no official game mulligan rule. There is, however, an official mulligan rule for organized and tournament play outlined in the LCG Tournament Rules document. This is just a fancy way of saying that mulligans exist for tournament play, not for normal play. However, most people apply the mulligan rule to casual play as well as to official competition. The mulligan rule for this game is that, after you draw your initial 7 cards and before you lay any cards out for setup, you can shuffle all seven of the cards back into your deck and draw a new opening hand of 7 cards. You may do this only once.
Thanks. Now I understand.
ktom said:
There is no official game mulligan rule.
so whats wrong with Obara Sand?
yes this is the 1st caracter i have seen who learn to me that a mulligan exist in this game
). thx to her ;o).
Kirat said:
And that's the point. If all you had was her card, the Core Set Rule Book and the FAQ, you'd have neither any idea what the mulligan rule is or how to resolve her card effect. It's not part of the basic game rules.
I'm not saying you can't use the mulligan rule outside of competitive play. I'm saying that it was designed primarily for competitive play and is only listed in the official tournament play rules rather than the base rules. (In that regard, the text on Obara Sand is designed primarily for competitive play the way that the text on the plot "Mutual Enemies" is designed primarily for multiplayer games.)
Most people do use the mulligan rule in casual play, but they would have had to read the rules for tournament play to even know it was there to use.