It's time to wrap up this month's installment of Personal Tutor.
We started this scenario with a flawed question: “Can I still pump it as a Colossus so it can attack?”
Let's break down the implications of this question:
- Ambition knows that Monstrosity abilities can normally only be used once.
- She doesn't know either that Artisan is still Monstrous after resolving the copy effect…
- or she thinks Monstrosity is tied to the specific Monstrous ability of that creature.
- She doesn't know that Artisan can currently attack as though it didn't have defender.
We can actually tackle all three of these problems with succinct answer. However, we don't want to just tell Ambition that she can attack because that is analyzing the game state in a way we have not been directly asked to do. What we have actually been asked about is what happens when the Monstrosity ability of the Artisan is activated.
“If Artisan became Monstrous before, it's still Monstrous. Copying a new creature only grabs the things that are actually physically printed on the card that matter to the game: name, cost, color, types, abilities, power, and toughness. (Pointing at the parts of the card as you go through the list is nice.) Anything other than that, it keeps from before it was a copy.
When you activate a Monstrosity ability, it checks on resolution to see if the creature is already Monstrous - regardless of which ability made it that way. If it isn't, it becomes Monstrous and gets however many counters. If it already is, it just stays Monstrous and the ability does nothing.”
We have the opportunity to explain not only Monstrosity, but also copiable characteristics. And we should actually take that opportunity so players don't have to ask the same question about a different ability in the future. Remember, 10 seconds of education here is likely to save a heck of a lot more time than that down the road.
We are actually expecting a follow-up question to that explanation, which is “So if it's already Monstrous, that means I can attack with it?” At which point, it's fine to just say “Yes.” A one-word answer here is entirely sufficient because we've already given Ambition the tools she needs to reach the right conclusion on her own, and we are just reinforcing her understanding.
Thanks to everybody who participated! We had a lot of good discussion and iterative improvement upon previous answers, which is what Personal Tutor strives to foster.
Personal Tutor will be back next month with a new scenario. If you would like to contribute a discussion topic to Personal Tutor or become a member of the Personal Tutor team, send me a message on the forums.