Quote from The above poster, I'm fairly sure, is incorrect about OP's first question. However, barring very strange circumstances, he'd choose the first option first, so no, Eye for an Eye and Fog don't produce a very useful interaction. If he applies Eye for an Eye's replacement effect first, then he takes the damage from Eye for an Eye, and then Fog's replacement effect applies and prevents the damage from the creature. If he applies Fog's replacement effect first, then Eye for an Eye's replacement effect will not apply at all (nor, for the record, be used up, though that's unlikely to matter) because no damage is being dealt. The "affected object's controller" is presumably an opponent, so said opponent chooses the order in which the replacement effects are applied. This creates two replacement effects that want to simultaneously apply to the same event, so 419.9a applies. So the situation is that your opponent attacks you, and you respond with Fog and also with Eye for an Eye targeting one of the attacking creatures. One is an enchantment that reads "If a card would be put into a graveyard, instead remove it from the game," and the other is a creature that reads "If would be put into a graveyard from play, instead shuffle it into its owner's library." The controller of the creature that would be destroyed decides which replacement to apply first the other does nothing. If two or more players have to make these choices at the same time, choices are made in APNAP order (see rule 103.4). If one or more of the applicable replacement effects is a self-replacement effect (see rule 419.6d), that effect is applied before any other replacement effects. Then the other effect applies if it is still appropriate. If you are both at 1 life and are attacked by a Grizzly Bear then if you use Eye for an Eye you will both be below 0 simultaneously and the game will end in a draw.Ĥ19.9a If two or more replacement or prevention effects are attempting to modify the way an event affects an object or player, the affected object's controller (or its owner if it has no controller) or the affected player chooses one to apply. In your first case you would apply either:įog then eye for an eye (which will prevent all combat damage dealt and then eye won't have anything to replace.Įye for an Eye then Fog (which will make the damage dealt to both you and your opponent and then Fog prevents all combat damage to all players so it won't do anything really.)Ĭorrect. When you have multiple replacement/prevention effects to apply you choose which order to apply them in and then apply any that remain. The damage dealt by Eye and from the source it targets is dealt at the same time? If I target a source that's lethal for both me ad the opponent who used it I'm gonna kill us both? How does it works with prevent damage effects? If a big creature is attacking, and I cast this and a fog, is the damage unilateral to my opponent or not? I just have a couple of questions about this card: