What happens when you attack with two Breaker of Armies?
Asked by Manifest_Destiny 9 years ago
If an opponent has three creatures how is blocking assigned?
When blocking decisions are to be made, they are made by the defending controller unless a card says otherwise.
If a creature must block multiple creatures:
Normally the defending player decides which creature it blocks. If that creature can block more than one creature, it must block as many as it possibly can.
March 22, 2016 6:47 p.m.
BioProfDude says... #3
When this card is played online (MtGO; and that's not always the same as a person-to-person game), all possible defenders are assigned to a single Breaker of Armies, so I assume it is the same. Thus, you may have 5 possible defenders, but all 5 must block a single Breaker of Armies.
March 22, 2016 10:15 p.m.
Rhadamanthus says... #4
@bpatric1: If you've seen that behavior in MTGO then you need to report it as a bug.
WomboCombo says... Accepted answer #1
3rd ruling from the gatherer page:
If more than one Breaker of Armies is attacking, the controller of each creature that could block them chooses which one that creature blocks. In this case, creatures that can block multiple creatures must block as many attacking Breaker of Armies as possible.
Assuming all 3 of your opponent's creatures are able to block, they must block one of the Breaker of Armies, but the controller of the blocking creatures gets to choose which one.
March 22, 2016 6:34 p.m.