807.1.
The Grand Melee variant is a modification of the Free-for-All variant, in which a group of
players compete against each other as individuals. Grand Melee is normally used only in games
begun with ten or more players.
807.2.
Any multiplayer options used are decided before play begins. The Grand Melee variant uses the
following default options.
807.2a
Each player has a range of influence of 1 (see rule 801).
807.2b
The attack left option is used (see rule 803).
807.2c
The attack multiple players and deploy creatures options aren‘t used in the Grand Melee
variant.
807.3.
The players are seated at random.
807.4.
The Grand Melee variant allows multiple players to take turns at the same time. Moving turn
markers keep track of which players are currently taking turns. Each turn marker represents an
active player‘s turn.
807.4a
There is one turn marker for each full four players in the game.
Example: A Grand Melee game with sixteen players has four turn markers. A game with
fifteen players has three turn markers.
807.4b
The starting player in the game gets the first turn marker. The player four seats to that
player‘s left (the fifth player) takes the second turn marker, and so on until all the turn markers
have been handed out. Each turn marker is assigned a number in this way. Then all players with
turn markers start their turns at the same time.
807.4c
After a player ends his or her turn, that player passes the turn marker to the player on his or
her left. If a player with a turn marker leaves the game during his or her turn, the player to his or
her left takes the turn marker after that turn ends. If a player with a turn marker leaves the game
before his or her turn begins, the player to his or her left takes the turn marker immediately.
807.4d
A player who receives a turn marker can‘t begin his or her turn if any player in the three
seats to his or her left has a turn marker. If this is the case, that player waits until the player four
seats to his or her left takes the other turn marker.
807.4e
If a player leaves the game and that player leaving the game would reduce the number of
turn markers in the game, the turn marker immediately to the departed player‘s right is
designated for removal. If more than one player leaves the game simultaneously, those players
leaving the game would reduce the number of turn markers in the game, and there are multiple
turn markers that could be removed, the marker with the lowest number is designated for
removal. A turn marker may be designated for removal multiple times.
807.4f
For the purposes of determining if one or more players leaving the game would reduce the
number of turn markers in the game (see rule 807.4e), disregard turn markers already designated
for removal.
807.4g
If a player who‘s taking a turn has a turn marker that‘s been designated for removal, that
turn marker is removed rather than being passed after that turn ends. If a player who‘s not taking
a turn has a turn marker that‘s been designated for removal, that turn marker is removed
immediately. If a removed turn marker had been designated for removal multiple times, the turn
marker to its right becomes designated for removal that many times minus one.
807.4h
If one or more consecutively seated players leave the game, the players that were on either
side of those seats don‘t enter one another‘s range of influence until the next turn begins.
807.4i
If an effect causes a player with a turn marker to take an extra turn after the current one, that
player keeps the turn marker and starts his or her next turn after the current turn ends, unless
another turn marker is too close on either side at that time. If a turn marker is within three seats
on the player‘s left, the extra turn waits to begin until the player four seats to his or her left takes
the other turn marker. If a turn marker is within three seats on the player‘s right, the player
passes the turn marker to his or her left when the turn ends rather than keeping it, and the player
will take the extra turn immediately before his or her next turn.
807.4j
If an effect would cause a player to take an extra turn after the current turn, but that player
wouldn‘t have a turn marker at the start of that turn, that player will take the extra turn
immediately before his or her next turn instead.
Example: During Alex?s turn, he casts Time Walk, which causes him to take an extra
turn after this one. During the same turn, the player to Alex?s left leaves the game, which
causes the number of turn markers to be reduced. After Alex?s current turn ends, his turn
marker is removed. He won?t take the extra turn from Time Walk until just before his
normal turn the next time he receives a turn marker.
807.5.
Rather than having a single stack, Grand Melee games contain multiple stacks. Each turn marker
represents its own stack.
807.5a
A player gets priority for a particular turn marker‘s stack only if the turn marker is within his
or her range of influence or an object on that stack is controlled by a player within his or her
range of influence.
807.5b
If a player has priority for multiple stacks and casts a spell, activates an ability, or a
triggered ability he or she controls triggers, the player must specify which one of those stacks
the spell or ability is put on. If an object on one of those stacks caused the triggered ability to
trigger, the player must put it on that stack. If a resolving spell or ability on one of those stacks
causes a player to cast a spell or create a copy of a spell, the new spell must be put on the same
stack. If a spell or ability targets an object on one of those stacks, it must be put on the same
stack as its target; it can‘t target objects on multiple stacks.