Banding
Banding | |
---|---|
Keyword Ability | |
Type | Static |
Introduced | Alpha |
Last used | Weatherlight |
Reminder Text | Banding (Any creatures with banding, and up to one without, can attack in a band. Bands are blocked as a group. If any creatures with banding you control are blocking or being blocked by a creature, you divide that creature's combat damage, not its controller, among any of the creatures it's being blocked by or is blocking.) |
Statistics |
47 cards 15% 13% Multicolor 4% 57% 9% 2% |
Scryfall Search | |
keyword:"Banding" |
Banding is a keyword ability with different effects depending on whether the banding creature is attacking or blocking. It was introduced in Alpha,[1] and no longer used in newer cards.
Description
By nature, banding is primarily a white ability (distributing damage – or another way of preventing damage by having it go to another creature). It was first printed in Alpha ("bands" was the original keyword used to represent the ability).
While acknowledging that banding was flavorful and effective if used properly, it has been effectively abandoned by designers for being overly confusing.[2] The last basic set in which banding appeared was the Fifth Edition,[3] and the last tournament-legal set was Weatherlight. The most recent card to be printed with banding is Greater Morphling in Unhinged.
Rules
Attacking and blocking
Attacking
Any number of attacking creatures with banding can join together with up to one attacking creature without banding; the defending player must either block the entire band or allow it to be unblocked. If a blocking creature can block any one creature in the band, it can block the entire band.
Example
A given creature with banding attacks and bands with a creature with flying. The opposing player is then allowed to block the entire band with Stratozeppelid.
In addition, if an attacking creature with banding becomes blocked, the attacking player chooses how damage from the blocking creatures is assigned.
Blocking
When blocking, if at least one creature blocking an attacker has banding, then the defending player may choose how the creature blocked by the creature(s) with banding assigns combat damage. This is a change from the normal rule in which the attacking player always chooses how his or her attacking creatures assign combat damage.
Cards that grant banding
Enchantments
Enchanted creature
Wall creatures you control
- Fortified Area (walls only)
Instant
Artifacts
Bands with other
A variant of banding, "bands with other" restricts banding to working with other creatures of a given type or quality (such as creatures that have a certain name). However, before the Magic 2010 rules changes (which came several years later than any cards featuring the ability), it was probably the most counter-intuitive ability in the game, because instead of allowing banding of with creatures of the given type, it only allowed banding with creatures with the same "bands with other" ability.[4][5][6]
There are eight cards in the Legends set with "bands with other" in the card text. Five banding lands can give the ability to legendary creatures, one creature can create tokens with the ability (Master of the Hunt) and two cards can remove the ability (Shelkin Brownie and Tolaria).
There are no tournament-legal creature cards that have "bands with other" ability. The only creature card actually printed with "bands with other" ability is Old Fogey in Unhinged. Mark Rosewater rates the mechanic an 11 on the Storm Scale of 10.[7]
Examples
Example 1
Benalish Hero
Creature — Human Soldier
1/1
Banding (Any creatures with banding, and up to one without, can attack in a band. Bands are blocked as a group. If any creatures with banding you control are blocking or being blocked by a creature, you divide that creature's combat damage, not its controller, among any of the creatures it's being blocked by or is blocking.)
Example 2
Master of the Hunt
Creature — Human
2/2
: Create a 1/1 green Wolf creature token named Wolves of the Hunt. It has "bands with other creatures named Wolves of the Hunt." (Any creatures named Wolves of the Hunt can attack in a band as long as at least one has "bands with other creatures named Wolves of the Hunt." Bands are blocked as a group. If at least two creatures named Wolves of the Hunt you control, one of which has "bands with other creatures named Wolves of the Hunt," are blocking or being blocked by the same creature, you divide that creature's combat damage, not its controller, among any of the creatures it's being blocked by or is blocking.)
External links
- Mark Rosewater. (November 26, 2014.) "Drive to Work #179 - Banding", (podcast) at wizards.com.
References
- ↑ Brady Dommermuth (June 01, 2009). "Mechanically Inclined". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (Dec 1, 2003). "The Baby and the Bathwater". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (June 8, 2015). "Evergreen Eggs & Ham". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Mark Gottlieb (March 06, 2002). "Absurd or Ridiculous? You Decide". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (November 10, 2003). "Make No Mistake". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Magic Arcana (Dec 10, 2009). "Friendly Goblin". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (July 11, 2017). "I remember you rated one mechanic an 11 on the storm scale.". Blogatog. Tumblr.