exchange and Darkworld

PerfectZelgadis

New Member
Okay my roommate (RPGkid) and I were discussing this. If a player is holding 3 Goldd's in his hand and plays Exchange. THe opponent is forced to take a Goldd. And the player takes Spirit Reaper and gets a direct attack off. Then he plucks the Goldd from his opponents hand. How would the effect resolve. Who would loose two cards on the field and whose field would Goldd get summoned too. If this worked in the ideal way Exchange might finally be playable.

Also, it brought up another question. If Exchange is played, and one player is using Red sleeves and the other is using Blue Sleeves what would happen if the player singled out the other persons color to keep from getting the effect off.
 
1. The Dark World Monsters are Graveyard activated effects, and work just like all the others Graveyard activated effects. They go to the owner of the card, not the previous controller.

2. Since the chioce needs to be random, general consensus is that you come up with a way to make it random. There's is no official stance from what I knw.
 
If I understood your situation correct, then this is the correct answer, (I think).

It's Player A's turn. Player A has Exchange and Spirit Reaper in hand. Player B has 3 Goldd, Wu-Lord of Dark World in hand. Player A activates Exchange. Player A receives 1 Goldd, Wu-Lord of Dark World. Player B receives 1 Spirit Reaper. Player A ends his turn. Player B summons the Spirit Reaper and attacks directly and successfully.

Goldd, Wu-Lord of Dark World is Special Summoned onto Player B's field and the seconardy effect doesn't activate because Goldd, Wu-Lord of Dark World wasn't discarded by an effect controlled by the owner of Goldd, Wu-Lord of Dark World.

I hope that helps. =/
 
The secondary effect of the "Goldd" that was discarded by "Spirit Reaper" will not activate. The Dark World Monsters check for who controlled the effect that discarded them when they activate in the Graveyard.

So, in your scenario, since the "Goldd" ends up in the Graveyard of the player who forced the discard, "Goldd" no longer sees that as being the opponent's card effect.


Hope this helps!
 
RPGKid said:
I was thinking that since Player A had Goldd in his/her hand, he/she is the owner of that card, so the secondary effect would activate.

Twiget mispoke. It must be discarded: by your opponent's card effect. Thus it arrives in the graveyard and activates. It looks to see if the opponent's effect discarded it and finds the effect was controlled by it's own owner. So it won't get the second effect.
 
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