Comp Rules wrote:
614.12. Some replacement effects modify how a permanent enters the battlefield. (See rules 614.1c–d.)
Such effects may come from the permanent itself if they affect only that permanent (as opposed to a
general subset of permanents that includes it). They may also come from other sources. To
determine which replacement effects apply and how they apply, check the characteristics of the
permanent as it would exist on the battlefield, taking into account replacement effects that have
already modified how it enters the battlefield (see rule 616.1), continuous effects generated by the
resolution of spells or abilities that changed the permanent’s characteristics on the stack (see rule
400.7a), and continuous effects from the permanent’s own static abilities, but ignoring continuous
effects from any other source that would affect it.
Ah, there we go, that's what I was looking for.
And yes, I also was interpreting the ruling in the gatherer page as referring to something like
Xenograft when it talks about an external source.
This ruling is on the gatherer page for Xenograft:
Quote:
Replacement effects that modify creatures of a certain type as they enter the battlefield will apply (or not apply) before you apply Xenograft’s effect. For example, if Warrior is the chosen creature type and you control Bramblewood Paragon, a Runeclaw Bear would not enter the battlefield with an additional +1/+1 counter.
Why wouldn't
Conspiracy work? It causes the card to gain the creature type before it even resolves. Which means it should follow the direction of this bolded phrase right?:
Comp Rules wrote:
614.12. Some replacement effects modify how a permanent enters the battlefield. (See rules 614.1c–d.)
Such effects may come from the permanent itself if they affect only that permanent (as opposed to a
general subset of permanents that includes it). They may also come from other sources. To
determine which replacement effects apply and how they apply, check the characteristics of the
permanent as it would exist on the battlefield, taking into account replacement effects that have
already modified how it enters the battlefield (see rule 616.1), continuous effects generated by the
resolution of spells or abilities that changed the permanent’s characteristics on the stack (see rule
400.7a), and continuous effects from the permanent’s own static abilities, but ignoring continuous
effects from any other source that would affect it.
Whatever ruling you give to Conspiracy should also apply to
Artificial Evolution right? Since they both grant the subtype while the card is on the stack.
I don't see how
Blades of Velis Vel fits into this picture?