How does rebound work in MTG?

“Rebound” means “If this spell was cast from your hand, instead of putting it into your graveyard as it resolves, exile it and, at the beginning of your next upkeep, you may cast this card from exile without paying its mana cost.”

When you cast a card from exile does it go to the graveyard?

I tried searching rules regarding this, but only found reference for the Rebound ability. With that ability: “If you cast a card from exile this way, it will go to your graveyard when it resolves or is countered. It won’t go back to exile.”

When does a card go to the graveyard?

A card doesn’t care that it came from graveyard, or hand or exile unless it’s ability says it does. When a spell is cast from exile, that spell goes to graveyard, unless it otherwise says to exile it.

When does a rebound card not rebound in magic?

Also, the spell will not Rebound if it is countered in some way; either by a spell or ability or by becoming countered on resolution. In both of these instances the card will go to the graveyard and not be exiled. When the delayed triggered ability resolves in your next upkeep you may cast this card again.

What happens when a rebound spell is cast?

As long as the Rebound spell was cast from your hand this replacement effect exiles the card instead of putting it in your graveyard when it resolves and generates a delayed triggered ability . This potential delayed triggered ability will trigger at the beginning of it controller’s next upkeep.

When do spells go to the graveyard in Magic The Gathering?

You’ll loot with Jace, have four cards in the graveyard (so he won’t transform), then Path to Exile will exile him (now you have 5 cards in your graveyard, but too late), then your opponent’s Lightning Bolt will have no target and be countered. Thanks for contributing an answer to Board & Card Games Stack Exchange!

You Might Also Like