What happens when two Ochran Assassins are attacking?












1















  1. What happens if I attack with 2 Ochran Assassins? Which Ochran Assassin must be blocked?


  2. Also, can my opponent cast spells (respond) after the Ochran Assassins have assigned damage?











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  • 7




    You are asking two different questions and I would suggest breaking them into separate questions in order to get them better answered.
    – Joe W
    Jan 5 at 19:57
















1















  1. What happens if I attack with 2 Ochran Assassins? Which Ochran Assassin must be blocked?


  2. Also, can my opponent cast spells (respond) after the Ochran Assassins have assigned damage?











share|improve this question




















  • 7




    You are asking two different questions and I would suggest breaking them into separate questions in order to get them better answered.
    – Joe W
    Jan 5 at 19:57














1












1








1








  1. What happens if I attack with 2 Ochran Assassins? Which Ochran Assassin must be blocked?


  2. Also, can my opponent cast spells (respond) after the Ochran Assassins have assigned damage?











share|improve this question
















  1. What happens if I attack with 2 Ochran Assassins? Which Ochran Assassin must be blocked?


  2. Also, can my opponent cast spells (respond) after the Ochran Assassins have assigned damage?








magic-the-gathering






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edited Jan 5 at 20:14









Glorfindel

2,4711827




2,4711827










asked Jan 5 at 19:54









ChrisChris

35828




35828








  • 7




    You are asking two different questions and I would suggest breaking them into separate questions in order to get them better answered.
    – Joe W
    Jan 5 at 19:57














  • 7




    You are asking two different questions and I would suggest breaking them into separate questions in order to get them better answered.
    – Joe W
    Jan 5 at 19:57








7




7




You are asking two different questions and I would suggest breaking them into separate questions in order to get them better answered.
– Joe W
Jan 5 at 19:57




You are asking two different questions and I would suggest breaking them into separate questions in order to get them better answered.
– Joe W
Jan 5 at 19:57










1 Answer
1






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oldest

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3














Your opponent may choose for each creature which of the two Ochran Assassin it blocks (or both, if it's a Palace Guard).




509.1c The defending player checks each creature they control to see whether it’s affected by any requirements (effects that say a creature must block, or that it must block if some condition is met). If the number of requirements that are being obeyed is fewer than the maximum possible number of requirements that could be obeyed without disobeying any restrictions, the declaration of blockers is illegal.




If your opponent has two creatures, they'll need to fulfill four requirements, but "the maximum possible number of requirements that could be obeyed without disobeying any restrictions" is two, and as long as both creatures are blocking, two requirements are fulfilled.





And there's no opportunity to cast spells between damage assignment and damage dealing:




510.2. Second, all combat damage that’s been assigned is dealt simultaneously. This turn-based action doesn’t use the stack. No player has the chance to cast spells or activate abilities between the time combat damage is assigned and the time it’s dealt.




(quotes are from the Comprehensive Rules)






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  • 2




    The player's ability to influence how the damage is assigned isn't just limited to the damage step, though. In fact, players usually don't have any choice during the damage assignment step. When a single creature has multiple blockers, the most important choice (i.e. the order in which blockers will be prioritised when the time comes to assign damage) is decided once blockers have been declared. And players do have the opportunity to play instants between that choice being made and damage being dealt.
    – Arthur
    Jan 5 at 21:44













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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









3














Your opponent may choose for each creature which of the two Ochran Assassin it blocks (or both, if it's a Palace Guard).




509.1c The defending player checks each creature they control to see whether it’s affected by any requirements (effects that say a creature must block, or that it must block if some condition is met). If the number of requirements that are being obeyed is fewer than the maximum possible number of requirements that could be obeyed without disobeying any restrictions, the declaration of blockers is illegal.




If your opponent has two creatures, they'll need to fulfill four requirements, but "the maximum possible number of requirements that could be obeyed without disobeying any restrictions" is two, and as long as both creatures are blocking, two requirements are fulfilled.





And there's no opportunity to cast spells between damage assignment and damage dealing:




510.2. Second, all combat damage that’s been assigned is dealt simultaneously. This turn-based action doesn’t use the stack. No player has the chance to cast spells or activate abilities between the time combat damage is assigned and the time it’s dealt.




(quotes are from the Comprehensive Rules)






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    The player's ability to influence how the damage is assigned isn't just limited to the damage step, though. In fact, players usually don't have any choice during the damage assignment step. When a single creature has multiple blockers, the most important choice (i.e. the order in which blockers will be prioritised when the time comes to assign damage) is decided once blockers have been declared. And players do have the opportunity to play instants between that choice being made and damage being dealt.
    – Arthur
    Jan 5 at 21:44


















3














Your opponent may choose for each creature which of the two Ochran Assassin it blocks (or both, if it's a Palace Guard).




509.1c The defending player checks each creature they control to see whether it’s affected by any requirements (effects that say a creature must block, or that it must block if some condition is met). If the number of requirements that are being obeyed is fewer than the maximum possible number of requirements that could be obeyed without disobeying any restrictions, the declaration of blockers is illegal.




If your opponent has two creatures, they'll need to fulfill four requirements, but "the maximum possible number of requirements that could be obeyed without disobeying any restrictions" is two, and as long as both creatures are blocking, two requirements are fulfilled.





And there's no opportunity to cast spells between damage assignment and damage dealing:




510.2. Second, all combat damage that’s been assigned is dealt simultaneously. This turn-based action doesn’t use the stack. No player has the chance to cast spells or activate abilities between the time combat damage is assigned and the time it’s dealt.




(quotes are from the Comprehensive Rules)






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    The player's ability to influence how the damage is assigned isn't just limited to the damage step, though. In fact, players usually don't have any choice during the damage assignment step. When a single creature has multiple blockers, the most important choice (i.e. the order in which blockers will be prioritised when the time comes to assign damage) is decided once blockers have been declared. And players do have the opportunity to play instants between that choice being made and damage being dealt.
    – Arthur
    Jan 5 at 21:44
















3












3








3






Your opponent may choose for each creature which of the two Ochran Assassin it blocks (or both, if it's a Palace Guard).




509.1c The defending player checks each creature they control to see whether it’s affected by any requirements (effects that say a creature must block, or that it must block if some condition is met). If the number of requirements that are being obeyed is fewer than the maximum possible number of requirements that could be obeyed without disobeying any restrictions, the declaration of blockers is illegal.




If your opponent has two creatures, they'll need to fulfill four requirements, but "the maximum possible number of requirements that could be obeyed without disobeying any restrictions" is two, and as long as both creatures are blocking, two requirements are fulfilled.





And there's no opportunity to cast spells between damage assignment and damage dealing:




510.2. Second, all combat damage that’s been assigned is dealt simultaneously. This turn-based action doesn’t use the stack. No player has the chance to cast spells or activate abilities between the time combat damage is assigned and the time it’s dealt.




(quotes are from the Comprehensive Rules)






share|improve this answer














Your opponent may choose for each creature which of the two Ochran Assassin it blocks (or both, if it's a Palace Guard).




509.1c The defending player checks each creature they control to see whether it’s affected by any requirements (effects that say a creature must block, or that it must block if some condition is met). If the number of requirements that are being obeyed is fewer than the maximum possible number of requirements that could be obeyed without disobeying any restrictions, the declaration of blockers is illegal.




If your opponent has two creatures, they'll need to fulfill four requirements, but "the maximum possible number of requirements that could be obeyed without disobeying any restrictions" is two, and as long as both creatures are blocking, two requirements are fulfilled.





And there's no opportunity to cast spells between damage assignment and damage dealing:




510.2. Second, all combat damage that’s been assigned is dealt simultaneously. This turn-based action doesn’t use the stack. No player has the chance to cast spells or activate abilities between the time combat damage is assigned and the time it’s dealt.




(quotes are from the Comprehensive Rules)







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jan 5 at 20:03

























answered Jan 5 at 19:58









GlorfindelGlorfindel

2,4711827




2,4711827








  • 2




    The player's ability to influence how the damage is assigned isn't just limited to the damage step, though. In fact, players usually don't have any choice during the damage assignment step. When a single creature has multiple blockers, the most important choice (i.e. the order in which blockers will be prioritised when the time comes to assign damage) is decided once blockers have been declared. And players do have the opportunity to play instants between that choice being made and damage being dealt.
    – Arthur
    Jan 5 at 21:44
















  • 2




    The player's ability to influence how the damage is assigned isn't just limited to the damage step, though. In fact, players usually don't have any choice during the damage assignment step. When a single creature has multiple blockers, the most important choice (i.e. the order in which blockers will be prioritised when the time comes to assign damage) is decided once blockers have been declared. And players do have the opportunity to play instants between that choice being made and damage being dealt.
    – Arthur
    Jan 5 at 21:44










2




2




The player's ability to influence how the damage is assigned isn't just limited to the damage step, though. In fact, players usually don't have any choice during the damage assignment step. When a single creature has multiple blockers, the most important choice (i.e. the order in which blockers will be prioritised when the time comes to assign damage) is decided once blockers have been declared. And players do have the opportunity to play instants between that choice being made and damage being dealt.
– Arthur
Jan 5 at 21:44






The player's ability to influence how the damage is assigned isn't just limited to the damage step, though. In fact, players usually don't have any choice during the damage assignment step. When a single creature has multiple blockers, the most important choice (i.e. the order in which blockers will be prioritised when the time comes to assign damage) is decided once blockers have been declared. And players do have the opportunity to play instants between that choice being made and damage being dealt.
– Arthur
Jan 5 at 21:44




















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