kingpinopie
Himoura Shinta
Ok... Royal Oppression... can it negate ANY special summon?? BLS.. Nimbles... etc?? and do you have to pay 800 each time you negate ??
What I mean to say is I've always presumed that the negation effect is only apllyng to a summoning effect and not to any other effect that has nothing to do with the summon. V Lords Recursion for example. I dont see it as a negation effect like Divine Wrath.novastar said:It is basically stating that it can both "respond" to a Special Summon from Hand (like Horn and SJ), AND be chained to and effect that Special Summons (like you would chain any other effect to it).
If you read the first ruling of the RO rulings it actually explains it quite well (for once).
This is why I disagree with the concept of there being a responce point between the declaration of a regular summon and the actual summoning. This concept creates a problem with Special Summons due to effects as there is no declaration of the summon in those instances.John Danker said:My question on this subject is if Vampire Lord is being special summoned from the graveyard by it's own effect and Royal Oppression negates it....then where is it when Royal Oppression negated it? It was in the graveyard....right? So as with Divine Wrath it can't be destroyed while it's in the graveyard, it's effect is just negated, therefore, as with Divine Wrath negating it's special summoning ability, it does not reactivate and is not special summoned the next turn.
Someone please teach me something here that says that Vampire Lord (and other such monsters that are special summoned by their own effect) leave the graveyard and float above the field waiting for their effect to resolve while Royal Oppression negates them thereby destroying them once again and sending them back to the graveyard....otherwise I'm going to have to assume that Royal Oppression should be ruled the same as Divine Wrath.
I've had an off day today and made a few silly comments .....so someone put my head on straight and tell me why it's ruled differently....please?
Where exactly does it say anything about destroying the card which was failed to be summoned? If the summon was negated the monster never hit the field and so couldn't be destroyed. Think about if you negate the summon of BLS-EotB, can your opponent then just reborn it or do they first have to get it back in their hand and summon it properly.Pay 800 Life Points to negate a Special Summon of a monster and the effect of a card that Special Summons a monster and destroy it. Both you and your opponent can use this effect as long as this card remains face-up on the field.
That destruction is refering to both responding and chaining. In both cases the card generating the effect is destroyed.Pay 800 Life Points to negate a Special Summon of a monster and the effect of a card that Special Summons a monster and destroy it.
Not true. "Cancel", "Nullify", "make ineffective or invalid" all mean to make what is going to happen, simply not happen.By definition, negate means to make what has happened as if it hasn't happened.
novastar said:That destruction is refering to both responding and chaining. In both cases the card generating the effect is destroyed.
Now here is the problem. "Cancel", "Nullify", "make ineffective or invalid" do not make what is going to happen, not happen. That is "prevention" and is in no way a synonym of these words. And this is the meat of the discussion.novastar said:Not true. "Cancel", "Nullify", "make ineffective or invalid" all mean to make what is going to happen, simply not happen.
To use Magic Jammer to negate or remove a Chain Link is the proper use of negate. You "cancel" the resolution of an effect thus making it "ineffective."
You'll notice I said "as if" The card is invalidating the summon, its making the Summon as if it never hapened, even though from the physical perspective of the players a card was place on the table, but a Summon as far as the game mechanics are concerned has not taken place.Where exactly does it say anything about destroying the card which was failed to be summoned? If the summon was negated the monster never hit the field and so couldn't be destroyed. Think about if you negate the summon of BLS-EotB, can your opponent then just reborn it or do they first have to get it back in their hand and summon it properly.
And the ruling doesn't work that way. But if you apply the proper meaning of the word "negate" to Royal Oppression's "negate" then the ruling makes perfect sense.resolve...
- Royal Oppression negates Chain Link 1
- The card is not destroyed because it is already in the Graveyard
The 2 situations should be identical, which is what the question is about here. For the way it looks, the only proper way to do this would be the chain RO, while V-Lord/Phonix is in the Graveyard and it therefore should not destroy V-Lord/Phoenix
Like I said, apply the proper meaning of the word "negate" and it can very easily be explained.daivahataka said:Crap, how asleep was I that I didn't even notice that!
But if the summon is negated the card never in fact leaves the Graveyard and so cannot be destroyed. Otherwise the scenario I mentioned with BLS-EotB would allow it to be special summoned from the graveyard after it's standard summon is negated. If the card was in the Graveyard already how can it be destroyed?
The ruling doesn't work.And the ruling doesn't work that way. But if you apply the proper meaning of the word "negate" to Royal Oppression's "negate" then the ruling makes perfect sense.
Which by your explaination would allow you to reborn BLS-EotB after his summon was negated since by your logic the summon must first have taken place. This would also render Jinzo immune to Horn of Heaven and Solemn Judgement.Digital Jedi said:Like I said, apply the proper meaning of the word "negate" and it can very easily be explained.
That is not correct. I keep using the words "undo" and "rewind" and the statement "it makes the summon as if it never happened." Negation would make the summon unsuccesful because the game never considered it to have happened, so no return for BLS. It's just like activating a spell card and have the activation "undone" by Magic Jammer. The game treats the Spell Card as if it were never activated, not counting the unnegatable cost, of course.daivahataka said:Which by your explaination would allow you to reborn BLS-EotB after his summon was negated since by your logic the summon must first have taken place. This would also render Jinzo immune to Horn of Heaven and Solemn Judgement.
Negate means to stop the event from ever having occured.
e.g.:"Negate the activation..." The card was never activated so skip resolving it.
So 2 ways... One using an effect that chains, the other through an effect that doesn't chain.Official FAQ said:There are basically 2 ways to Special Summon a monster.
In this case you "chain" to the effect, that is attempting to resolve but has not happened (resolved) yet.Official FAQ said:The first way is with a Spell Card like "Monster Reborn", a Trap Card like "Call of the Haunted", or an Effect Monster like "Magical Scientist". (in otherwords..."activate" an effect")[..]In the first case, you chain the activation of "Royal Oppression"'s effect to the activation of the Spell, Trap, or Monster Card's effect, and negate the effect.
In this case you "respond" directly to the "action" of summoning, that is attempting to resolve, but has not happened (resolved) yet.Official FAQ said:The second way is built in to the monster, and Special Summons it without activating an effect, such as "Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning" or "Dark Necrofear". "Royal Oppression" can negate both of these types of Special Summon.[..] In the second case, right before the monster is Special Summoned, you can activate the effect of "Royal Oppression" to negate the Special Summon (the same procedure that you use for "Horn of Heaven" or "Solemn Judgment").
I'm close to where you are, i really have had a hard time justifying the RO ruling on V-Lord ever since i saw it. I've always thought it was wrong.John Danker said:I'm still not getting any response to my thought pattern on this question.
If Vampire Lord / Phoneix activates their effect from the graveyard and the special summon is negated by Royal Oppression....where was the monster when it's special summon was negated? It's not in the hand obviously, it's not in the RFP area, it never made it to the field....so that only leaves two places where it could be when it's special summon was negated, either floating above the field waiting to be summoned or still in the graveyard. If it's still in the graveyard then it should be ruled like Divine Wrath....and I haven't heard of a condition yet where a monster that special summons itself from the graveyard activates it's effect and floats above the field waiting for resolution.
I'm going to enjoy hearing the eventual (if ever) explination of this one. I truly will learn something new and interesting I suspect.
novastar said:It's good to have these mechanical discussions. I find it very helpful for me, and it exercises my understanding and helps to teach me new things as well as correct misconceptions i might have had.
I find this forum to be the best around for good discussion as well.