A nasty surprise for your opponent if he enjoys keeping you at 1 life, ready to ping you with a tim. Whoops, your tim is now a vanilla creature, pyroclasm!
Posted By:
h4mx0r
(8/26/2009 7:05:43 PM)
You need to play Sudden Spoiling after Overrun resolves.
Both Overrun's "gains trample" and Sudden Spoiling's "loses all abilities" are layer 6. They will be applied in timestamp order. Since Overrun resolved first. The creature will gain trample. Then it will lose all abilities.
However, Sudden Spoiling's P/T changing effect (layer 7) is in layer 7b, whereas Overrun's +3/+3 is in layer 7c. No matter what order they're played in, they'll be 3/5's (assuming no other effect was in play), since 7b always happen before 7c.
So what Sudden Spoiling will do to overrun (assuming you played it correctly), is remove trample and makde the opponent' creatures 3/5.
Posted By:
MtFrostM
(4/21/2011 9:45:17 PM)
12/3/2012 11:28:11 AM
at worst its a fog with split second in a color that basically has no fog-like cards.
and with the new set (Return to Ravinca {dating this post}) electrickery turns this into a one-sided day of judgment for 1 more mana (seeing as the opponent has no pumps in place).
5/5
Edit:
@Missile_Penguin: not just Sorceress Queen but also Humble/Humility... but mostly Humble, due to the fact that it's the same ability, and it's shifted in color due to the block (despite in not actually truely being out of color for black with Sorceress Queen, and agruealby the color changing started in with planar chaos). All you basically do here is pay 1 more mana for split second, and make that mana colored black to have it apply to all of the opponent's creatures.
Posted By:
raptorman333
(6/10/2013 11:13:50 AM)
That's a Nice anything you got there
Posted By:
Xineombine
(10/7/2013 4:47:32 AM)
@Etragan
how exactly would this work against an Overrun? Because the Overrun is trying to give them all +3/+3 but sudden spoiling is making them all 0/2s. So would they all just be 3/5s or does the time stamp from the Ovverrun cause it to be over ruled by the Sudden Spoiling?
Thos timestamp/stack rules always get wonky with stuff like this.
Posted By:
StagemasterK
(11/30/2009 4:26:58 PM)
This is what you do when your opponent drops an Overrun.
Posted By:
Etregan
(11/22/2009 1:38:18 AM)
Wait, why did you donate your heartless summoning to me?
Oh...
Posted By:
Paleopaladin
(5/31/2012 9:31:02 PM)
Me and my bro use this plusInfest to stop our friends Progenitus
Posted By:
Kirbyguy91
(9/1/2009 4:27:40 PM)
This is what happens when a Sorceress Queen gets mad :D
You're right about the "worst" use of this card, ICEFANG13.
Yet i'd personally call a "black Fog or Holy Day" simply "Darkness" ;)
And opposed to these spells it also prevents any non-combat damage which is based on the creatures' power, so if your opponent tries to fling a creature at you for instance that won't hurt this turn. Thanks to Split second, your opponent can't prevent that spell from resolving either.
Posted By:
Mode
(12/4/2009 5:26:59 AM)
StagemasterK:
I believe you are thinking that Sudden Spoiling gives all creatures target player controls +0/+2, while in all actuality it is reducing each of the targeted player's creatures' power and toughness to 0 and 2, i.e. Hill Giant would become 0/2 even though it is a 3/3 normally; in other words, Sudden Spoiling works against Overrun in that it basically makes its casting a waste of the target player's mana.
Posted By:
atsandwich
(1/23/2010 5:36:33 PM)