Bury: Difference between revisions
>Hunterofsalvation No edit summary |
>@DeletedUser40397020 (→Rules: copy from current CR) |
||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
==Rules== | ==Rules== | ||
{{rules|text= | {{rules|text= | ||
''From the [[Comprehensive Rules]]'' (''[[Magic Origins]]'' (<small>July 17, 2015</small>)): | |||
;Bury (Obsolete) | |||
:A term that meant “put [a permanent] into its owner’s graveyard.” In general, cards that were printed with the term “bury” have received errata in the Oracle card reference to read, “Destroy [a permanent]. It can’t be regenerated,” or “Sacrifice [a permanent].”}} | |||
==Examples== | ==Examples== |
Revision as of 20:57, 9 September 2015
Bury is an obsolete keyword action. The term was introduced in Revised, and removed from the vocabulary of Magic in the Tempest set and Sixth Edition. [1]
All cards that used the term were given errata in the Oracle card reference to instead read "Destroy [something]. It can't be regenerated," or "Sacrifice [something]."
Rules
From the ()
Examples
After Revised and prior to the rule change, the 5th Edition wording of Wrath of God was as follows:
Wrath of God received errata after Tempest was released to read "Destroy all creatures. Those creatures cannot be regenerated this turn." When 6th Edition, this wording was simplified further to the modern "Destroy all creatures. They can't be regenerated."
Sacrificing
Some cards used "bury" as a general term for putting something into a player's graveyard, usually by sacrificing it. These cards received errata to indicate exactly what was to be done with them. For example, Urborg Justice and Call of the Wild from Weatherlight used "bury" to indicate two different things; they received errata to state specifically what.