That player can’t take any more mulligans, but his or her teammate may. Once each player on the starting team decides to keep an opening hand, the other team may take mulligans.

Example: Bob and Clare are the starting team in a Two-Headed Giant game. They’ve each draw seven cards. After reviewing each other’s hands, both Bob and Clare decide to mulligan. Each shuffles his or her hand into his or her deck and draws seven cards. Clare isn’t sure about Bob’s new hand, but he decides to keep it. Clare decides to take another mulligan. Bob’s hand becomes his opening hand, and Clare shuffles her hand into her deck and draws six cards. Then only Clare has the option to mulligan. She decides to keep her hand of six cards and that becomes her opening hand. After that, the other team decides whether to take mulligans.

101.5. Once all players have kept their opening hands, the starting player takes his or her first turn.

101.5a In a two-player game, the player who plays first skips the draw step (see rule 304, “Draw Step”) of his or her first turn.

101.5b In multiplayer games, no player skips the draw step of his or her first turn. However, the Two- Headed Giant variant has a special rule: Although the starting team’s first draw step isn’t skipped, only the secondary player on that team draws a card during that step. See rule 606, “Two-Headed Giant Variant.”

102. Winning and Losing

102.1. A game ends immediately when either a player wins or the game is a draw.

102.2. There are several ways to win the game.

102.2a A player still in the game wins the game if all of that player’s opponents have lost the game.

102.2b An effect may state that a player wins the game.

102.2c. In a multiplayer game between teams, a team with at least one player still in the game wins the game if all other teams have lost the game. Each player on the winning team wins the game, even if one or more of those players had previously lost that game.

102.3. There are several ways to lose the game.

102.3a A player can concede the game at any time. A player who concedes loses the game immediately.

102.3b If a player’s life total is 0 or less, he or she loses the game the next time a player would receive priority. (This is a state-based effect. See rule 420.)

102.3c When a player is required to draw more cards than are left in his or her library, he or she draws the remaining cards, and then loses the game the next time a player would receive priority. (This is a state-based effect. See rule 420.)

102.3d If a player has ten or more poison counters, he or she loses the game the next time a player would receive priority. (This is a state-based effect. See rule 420.)

102.3e If a player would both win and lose simultaneously, he or she loses.

102.3f In a multiplayer game between teams, a team loses the game if all players on that team have lost.

102.4. There are several ways to draw the game.

102.4a If all the players remaining in a game lose simultaneously, the game is a draw.

102.4b If the game somehow enters a “loop,” repeating a sequence of events with no way to stop, the game is a draw. Loops that contain an optional action don’t result in a draw.

102.4c In a multiplayer game between teams, the game is a draw if all remaining teams lose at once.

102.5. If a player loses the game, he or she leaves the game. Likewise, if a player leaves the game, he or she loses the game. The multiplayer rules handle what happens when a player leaves the game; see rule 600.4.

103. The Magic Golden Rules

103.1. Whenever a card’s text directly contradicts these rules, the card takes precedence. The card overrides only the rule that applies to that specific situation. The only exception is that a player can concede the game at any time (see rule 102.3a).

103.2. When a rule or effect says something can happen and another effect says it can’t, the “can’t” effect wins. For example, if one effect reads “You may play an additional land this turn” and another reads “You can’t play land cards this turn,” the effect that keeps you from playing lands wins out. Note that adding abilities to objects and removing abilities from objects don’t fall under this rule. See rule 407, “Adding and Removing Abilities.”

103.3. If an instruction requires taking an impossible action, it’s ignored. (In many cases the card will specify consequences for this; if it doesn’t, there’s no effect.)

103.4. If multiple players would make choices and/or take actions at the same time, the active player (the player whose turn it is) makes any choices required, then the next player in turn order (usually the player seated to the active player’s left) makes any choices required followed by the remaining nonactive players in turn order. Then the actions happen simultaneously. This rule is often referred to as the “Active Player, Nonactive Player (APNAP) order” rule.

Example: A card reads “Each player sacrifices a creature.” First, the active player chooses a creature he or she controls. Then each of the nonactive players chooses a creature he or she controls. Then all creatures are sacrificed simultaneously.

103.4a A player knows the choices made by the previous players when he or she makes his or her choice.

103.4b If a player would make more than one choice at the same time, the player makes the choices in the

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