The semicolon is there to separate what you do when you activate this card, vs. This article was originally posted on the Yu-Gi-Oh! TCG Strategy Site, which you can find here. Part 3: Conditions, Activations, and Effects Put on your thinking caps! For example: Timing — If we make a chain, do I do things when I activate my card or when the card resolves?
Targeting — Does this card target something? If it has more than 1 target, what happens if one target goes away? Conditions — What if something changes between the moment I play the card and the moment it finishes up and goes to the Graveyard? Green text limits when you can do things. This includes things like costs and targeting.
This is what happens when the card effect actually happens. When you activate a card or effect: Make sure the green part before the colon is being followed. Do the part in red before the semicolon if there is any. After that, other cards and effects can be chained in response. So you only need a Spellcaster-Type monster when you activate this card, not when it resolves. The semicolon tells us the only thing you do at activation is target a monster. You Tribute, then Summon, then destroy if you want , in order.
The last thing that happens is that you destroy. Both of these effects are Continuous, so Blade Knight never starts a Chain. Which means, among other things, that you cannot use something like Divine Wrath on him. Clues: Aha! I see a colon. This effect starts a chain. Divine Wrath incoming! Compare that to Adreus, Keeper of Armageddon from Generation Force : Once per turn: You can detach 1 Xyz Material from this card to target 1 face-up card your opponent controls; destroy it.
Target confirmed the decision in a statement to comic book and games website Bleeding Cool. Guests can continue to shop these cards online at Target. Earlier this year, Target limited the number of packs per person to three and then one. The store had to stop people camping outside overnight when trading cards were restocked, The Verge reported.
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