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Effect Veiler doesn't care where the monster is when its effect resolves, only where it the effect was activated.Cards like Exiled Force or Rescue Rabbit activate on the field, even though they send themselves to the graveyard as the cost, and even though the effect resolves while the monsters are in the graveyard. But because the effect was activated on the field, Effect Veiler would still negate it. By contrast, if Effect Veiler was used against a Giant Rat that was destroyed by battle, then the effect would not be negated. Giant Rat activates in the graveyard, not on the field.Skill Drain's rulings should not be referenced, because Skill Drain looks at where the monster is when the effect tries to resolve, not where the effect is activated.
Yes, it is a Quick Effect, so is spell speed 2, which means it can be chained to a monster effect activation. Effect Veiler will resolve first and the activated monster's effect will be negated when it tries to resolve.
No. A Gladiator Beast monster's effect may only be activated if it was returned to the Deck from the field. Also, it must have been returned by its own effect or by the effect of Test Tiger.
A 'reverse effect' is the Japanese OCG term for what the English TCG calls a 'Flip Effect'.
Peters work has always been inspired and informed by the study of natural phenomena and it's subjective effect on our emotions. The universe seems to exhibit a ubiquitous tendency for spontaneous pattern formation balanced by an equally strong tendency for random variation. The dynamic tension between these two principals produces the seemingly infinite variation of forms which surround us and in recent years Peter has become increasingly interested in working with these polarities in a spirit of improvisation.
The refrains in the fifth stanza of "Lord Randall" create a sense of despair and hopelessness as they reinforce the repetitive nature of the conversation between Lord Randall and his mother. The variations in the repeated lines highlight the mother's growing concern and emphasize the inevitability of Lord Randall's fate.
have a strong emotional effect...
refrain
They create genetic variations.
The refrain in the poem "The Highwayman" by Alfred Noyes is "The wind was a torrent of darkness among the gusty trees," which is repeated multiple times throughout the poem to create a haunting and atmospheric effect.
Refrain refers to a repeated line or phrase in a song or poem. It is a part of the structure that is reiterated throughout the piece for emphasis or effect. An example is the refrain "I took the road less traveled by" in Robert Frost's poem "The Road Not Taken."
yes it can!
The emotional or sensory effect of a work
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