Can Whispersilk cloak be targeted?
James Holden
Re: can you target whispersilk cloak directly? Yes.
Does sudden spoiling remove indestructible?
Sudden Spoiling will remove unblockable from, say, Invisible Stalker and indestructible from Predator Ooze, because they have abilities that grant them those qualities.
Does Whispersilk cloak remove other equipment?
Thx in advance! Awesome banner by Zaph and avatar by SpiderBoy4 both from HighLight Studios!! whispersilk cloak and veil of secrecy grant shroud to the creature. shroud does not alter equipment or auras.
Does Whispersilk cloak remove enchantments?
No, shroud won’t removes auras. Also, you opponent couldn’t equip a creature with Whispersilk Cloak that you control as equip on let’s you activate the ability on a creature they control.
Can you counter sudden spoiling?
you know that after sudden spoiling resolves, you can activate spells and abilities again, right? so, your opponent can declare blocks and sudden spoiling, you can let that resolve and then respond with combat tricks or fogs or whatever.
Does shroud make equipment fall off?
Re: if a creature gains shroud lose equipment Equipment doesn’t constantly target, only when using the equip ability (or something else that targets). Giving a creature shroud when equipment is attached doesn’t cause the equipment to fall off.
Can you equip a creature that has shroud?
You can’t play the Equip ability targeting a creature with Shroud. It’s possible for the Equipment to become attached to such a creature, and if that happens it will stay attached. But in general, no, you can’t equip it.
Does shroud protect from board wipes?
Like creatures with hexproof, creatures with shroud are difficult to deal with, since you can’t target the with removal spells. However, board wipes and any other spells that don’t target will be useful here, and you can still block them with your creatures.
How does sudden spoiling work MTG?
Sudden Spoiling overwrites any effects that set a creature’s power and toughness. Sudden Spoiling affects only creatures the target player controls at the time it resolves. Creatures they begin to control later in the turn won’t change power and toughness or lose abilities.