mafteechr's classroom: Transforming
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mafteechr
24 September 2011
2383 views
24 September 2011
2383 views
Double-Faced Cards and Transforming
This will be a quick article highlighting some of the new rules concerning double-faced cards and the transform mechanic, and addressing some questions that have been raised.
First, some very basic rules.
711.1. Each double-faced card has a Magic card face on each side rather than a Magic card face on one side and a Magic card back on the other. Each face may have abilities that allow the permanent to “transform,” or turn over to its other face. Tokens and cards with a Magic card back can’t transform. (See rule 701.25, “Transform.”)
711.1a A double-faced card’s front face is indicated by the sun symbol in its upper left corner.
711.1b A double-faced card’s back face is indicated by the moon symbol in its upper left corner.
711.1c While a double-faced card is in a public zone, each player may look at both faces.
711.1d If the back face of a double-sided card is a creature, the front face of that card will have the back face’s power and toughness printed in italicized gray text in the lower right of its text box. This is reminder text and has no effect on game play.
Now, some more finer details about each face of the card.
711.2. Each face of a double-faced card has its own set of characteristics.
711.2a In every zone other than the battlefield, and also on the battlefield with its front face up, a double-faced card has only the characteristics of its front face.
711.2b While a double-faced permanent’s back face is up, it has only the characteristics of its back face. The back face doesn’t have a mana cost; it has the colors in its color indicator (see rule 202.2e).
Some consequences of these rules include the converted mana cost of double-faced cards on the battlefield. If using Birthing Pod, a card with it’s back face up will have a converted mana cost of zero and can only fetch a creature with converted mana cost of one. Additionally, Ratchet Bomb can be used with zero counters on it to destroy all double-faced cards with their back face up.
711.8. If an effect instructs a player to name a card, the player may name either face of a double-faced card but not both.
This rule is important for cards such as Surgical Extraction. Note that with rule 711.2a above, you must name the front face of the card if the card is in any zone other than the battlefield.
One of the biggest troubles is cloning a double-faced cards.
711.3. Except for determining whether or not a permanent can transform, a spell, ability, or rule that needs information about a double-faced permanent sees only the information given by the face that’s currently up.
701.25a Only permanents represented by double-faced cards can transform. (See rule 711, “Double-Faced Cards.”) If a spell or ability instructs a player to transform any permanent that isn’t a double-faced card, nothing happens.
For example, if you cast Phyrexian Metamorph copying Thraben Sentry Flip, it will only have the characteristics of the side face up, in this case, the front face. If another creature you control dies (which is the trigger for Thraben Sentry Flip’s transform ability), then Phyrexian Metamorph will not transform, because it physically does not have two sides.
Another example, if you cast Phantasmal Image copying Thraben Militia Flip, it will only have the characteristics of the side face up, in this case, the back face. Thus, the converted mana cost of Phantasmal Image will be zero.
Transforming is another concern for some players, whether or not it affects counters, equipment, and other objects.
711.7. When a double-faced permanent transforms, it doesn’t become a new object. Any effects that applied to that permanent will continue to apply to it after it transforms.
Thus, any triggered abilities for creatures or permanents entering the battlefield will not trigger. Additionally, any auras, equipment, counters, and damage marked on the permanent will remain on the permanent after transforming.
Here are a few rules concerning casting and resolving of double-faced cards.
711.4. If a double-faced card is cast as a spell, it’s put on the stack with its front face up. A double-faced card can’t be cast face down. See rule 601, “Casting Spells.”
711.5. A double-faced card enters the battlefield with its front face up.
To end this article, I will leave the remaining rules I have not touched on. Most of these will relate to older mechanics.
711.6. A double-faced permanent always has the status “face up” (see rule 110.6). Double-faced permanents can’t be turned face down. If a spell or ability tries to turn a double-faced permanent face down, nothing happens.
701.25c Although transforming a permanent uses the same physical action as turning a permanent face up or face down, they are different game actions. Abilities that trigger when a permanent is turned face down won’t trigger when that permanent transforms, and so on.
Thank! In case you (or any other readers) are interested, I do have a blog where I post articles like this.
http://mtgknowledgepool.tumblr.com
Posting is infrequent, but if you like these articles, just follow it and you'll be notified when I'm actually not lazy.
September 24, 2011 10:28 p.m.
Wow, they don't seem as cool anymore... Thanks though! I like your writing technique :)
September 24, 2011 11:10 p.m.
That comes up automatically when you tag the front face of a card.
September 25, 2011 3:38 a.m.
mossflower says... #6
Good article. Just one thing, though: you forgot the "s" in transforming in the title.
September 25, 2011 4:18 a.m.
popeyroach says... #9
Thanks for the clarification. The (rather experienced) players at my local store told me you can't clone a moon-side face of a card. I knew they had to be wrong about that. Thanks for clearing it up (especially the cmc)
September 26, 2011 5:51 p.m.
If you are interested, here is a pdf version of the article you can print:
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/542438/MTGKP%20Double%20Faced%20Transforming.pdf
September 26, 2011 6:07 p.m.
DeckBuilder345 says... #12
Ok so here is an interesting question.
Suppose a werewolf is transformed so that it is showing the strong back side, and i play Evil Twin targeting the werewolf and it resolves, but then during my turn my opponent plays two spells, so that at the beginning of his upkeep his werwolf transforms back into a human, and he plays one spell on his own turn so that he stays a human. When it becomes my turn can i use the evil twin ability to kill his werewolf (which now has the human side face up?)?
September 27, 2011 1:47 p.m.
Rhadamanthus says... #13
Village Ironsmith Flip Flip (for example) doesn't have the same name as your Evil Twin of Ironfang Flip , so the Twin can't use his ability to assassinate it.
September 27, 2011 1:52 p.m.
Nighthawk86 says... #14
Here's a question:
Say, I target a werewolf in human form with a Go for the Throat . Then, in response, my opponent uses Moonmist to transform it. Is the target still valid or does the spell just fizzle?
If I had to guess, I'm sure the spell would still go through, but I'd just like a confirmation rather than just assuming. Thanks in advance!
September 28, 2011 9:33 p.m.
Rhadamanthus says... #15
A card that transforms is still the same object, it just looks different, like a card that flips or turns face up/down. That's the Rule 711.7 mafteechr quotes in his article. This means a spell or ability targeting it while it transforms doesn't lose track of it, and will resolve normally unless something else keeps it from doing so.
bman5604 says... #1
Good to know mafteechr. I always enjoy your articles. I only have one complaint I dont think your chairs will hold my big ass. lol
September 24, 2011 9:20 p.m.