Pbartender
First Post
Wolfwood2 said:I thought fighters had to use a melee attack to mark.
Nope... "Every time you attack an enemy, whether that attack hits or misses, you can choose to mark that target." ...any attack will work.
Wolfwood2 said:I thought fighters had to use a melee attack to mark.
Klaus said:I think this bit:
A new mark supercedes a mark that was already in place.
applies to marked creatures and to marker creatures: As soon as you put a new mark in play, the previous one disappears. As soon as you're marked by a new creature, a previous mark upon you disappears.
He's also wrong. In fact, in the very first article where we learned about marking, we see a fighter mark two targets at once.Pbartender said:That is, honestly, the one bit I wasn't entirely certain of.
From reading that article, I got the impression that marking two opponents was a feature of the thicket of blades power, not the general marking rule (remember, simple rules, many exception).Peter LaCara said:He's also wrong. In fact, in the very first article where we learned about marking, we see a fighter mark two targets at once.