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Encantamiento, WW (2)
En cuanto el Halo rúnico entre en juego, nombra una carta.
Tienes protección contra el nombre elegido. (No puedes ser objetivo, recibir daño o estar encantado por nada con ese nombre.)
Illus. Steve Prescott
Enchantment As Runed Halo enters the battlefield, name a card.
You have protection from the chosen name. (You can't be targeted, dealt damage, or enchanted by anything with that name.)1
Gatherer Card Rulings [Nov 2009]
- 5/1/2008: Runed Halo gives you protection from each object with the chosen name, whether it's a card, a token, or a copy of a spell. It doesn't matter what game zone that object is in.
- 5/1/2008: You can still be attacked by creatures with the chosen name.
- 5/1/2008: You'll have protection from the name, not from the word. For example, if you choose the name Forest, you'll have protection from anything named "Forest" -- but you won't have protection from Forests. An animated Sapseep Forest, for example, could deal damage to you even though its subtype is Forest.
- 5/1/2008: If you want to name a split card, you must name both halves of the card. You'll have protection from each half.
- 5/1/2008: You can't choose [nothing] as a name. Face-down creatures have no name, so Runed Halo can't give you protection from them.
- 5/1/2008: You must choose the name of a card, not the name of a token. For example, you can't choose "Saproling" or "Voja." However, if a token happens to have the same name as a card (such as "Shapeshifter" or "Goldmeadow Harrier"), you can choose it.
- 5/1/2008: You may choose either one of a flip card's names. You'll have protection only from the appropriate version. For example, if you choose Nighteyes the Desecrator, you won't have protection from Nezumi Graverobber.
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