About: Chains, Activation, and Resolution   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Activation is when you declare an intent to use a card: flipping a Trap Card face-up, announcing that you are using a monster's effect, flipping a face-down Spell Card, and playing a Spell Card from your hand are all examples of activation. Resolution is when you carry out the effects of a card. When you chain multiple Spell/Trap Cards together, their activation (intent to use the card) is declared, one after the other. But no cards have resolution until nobody wishes to chain (activate) more Spell/Trap Cards. A simple 2-card chain works like this: * Step 2 Resolves. * Step 1 Resolves.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Chains, Activation, and Resolution
rdfs:comment
  • Activation is when you declare an intent to use a card: flipping a Trap Card face-up, announcing that you are using a monster's effect, flipping a face-down Spell Card, and playing a Spell Card from your hand are all examples of activation. Resolution is when you carry out the effects of a card. When you chain multiple Spell/Trap Cards together, their activation (intent to use the card) is declared, one after the other. But no cards have resolution until nobody wishes to chain (activate) more Spell/Trap Cards. A simple 2-card chain works like this: * Step 2 Resolves. * Step 1 Resolves.
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:yugi-oh/pro...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:yugioh/prop...iPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • Activation is when you declare an intent to use a card: flipping a Trap Card face-up, announcing that you are using a monster's effect, flipping a face-down Spell Card, and playing a Spell Card from your hand are all examples of activation. Resolution is when you carry out the effects of a card. When you chain multiple Spell/Trap Cards together, their activation (intent to use the card) is declared, one after the other. But no cards have resolution until nobody wishes to chain (activate) more Spell/Trap Cards. A simple 2-card chain works like this: * Step 1 is activated (Spell Card played, Trap Card flipped face-up, etc.). * Step 2 is chained to Step 1 (activated). (neither player wishes to chain additional cards) (resolve in reverse order) * Step 2 Resolves. * Step 1 Resolves. In a 3-card chain: * Step 1 is activated. * Step 2 is activated. * Step 3 is activated. (neither player wishes to chain additional cards) (resolve in reverse order) * Step 3 resolves. * Step 2 resolves. * Step 1 resolves. Note on terminology: Some Continuous Trap Cards have effects that can be re-used, such as "Ultimate Offering", "Skull Lair", etc. To "activate" these Trap Cards is to flip the Trap Card from face-down to face-up, just like with any other Trap Card. Once the card is activated, you may "use" the card, or "use its effect", or "activate the effect." These are all synonymous terms but are different from activation of the card (which still means flipping the Trap Card face-up). The "use" of a Continuous Trap Card's effect (which has a Spell Speed of 2) can be chained and can be chained to. You CAN activate (flip face-up) a Continuous Trap Card and also use its effect in the same chain. IMPORTANT: When resolving a chain, as the cards resolve they are NOT sent to the Graveyard until the entire chain has resolved, or a card specifically destroys them. This is important for cards such as "Princess of Tsurugi" and "Secret Barrel" where the effect depends on the number of Spell & Trap Cards on the field. This link provides a detailed explanation of how and what to do on a/card(s) that have been activated in a chain and also how to resolve them properly. * Example #1: * Step 1: Player A Flip Summons "Princess of Tsurugi." * Step 2: Player B chains "Barrel Behind the Door" to the effect. Because "Barrel Behind the Door" remains on the field until the chain resolves, Player A takes 500 points of damage (1 Trap Card on the opponent's side of the field) from "Princess of Tsurugi's" Flip Effect. * Example #2: * Step 1: Player A Flip Summons "Princess of Tsurugi." * Step 2: Player B chains "Barrel Behind the Door" to the effect. * Step 3: Player A chains "Seven Tools of the Bandit" to "Barrel Behind the Door." "Seven Tools of the Bandit" resolves first, and destroys "Barrel Behind the Door", which is sent to the Graveyard immediately. "Princess of Tsurugi" does zero damage to Player B because Player B has no Spell or Trap Cards remaining on the field since "Barrel Behind the Door" was destroyed and sent to the Graveyard. * Example #3: * Step 1: Player A activates "Secret Barrel." * Step 2: Player B chains "Ring of Destruction", her only card on the field or in her hand. Even though "Ring of Destruction" resolves first, "Secret Barrel" still does 200 damage to Player B because "Ring of Destruction" is on the field when "Secret Barrel" resolves.
Alternative Linked Data Views: ODE     Raw Data in: CXML | CSV | RDF ( N-Triples N3/Turtle JSON XML ) | OData ( Atom JSON ) | Microdata ( JSON HTML) | JSON-LD    About   
This material is Open Knowledge   W3C Semantic Web Technology [RDF Data] Valid XHTML + RDFa
OpenLink Virtuoso version 07.20.3217, on Linux (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu), Standard Edition
Data on this page belongs to its respective rights holders.
Virtuoso Faceted Browser Copyright © 2009-2012 OpenLink Software