Can you exert a creature that comes in tapped and attacking?

No, you cannot exert a creature that enters the battlefield tapped and attacking because exert is an optional cost you pay as you declare it as an attacker; creatures that enter already attacking skip that declaration step, so the exert window is missed, meaning you don't get the benefit and it still won't untap normally (if it somehow became untapped).
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Can you exert a creature that enters tapped and attacking?

Rulings. All cards in the Amonkhet set that let you exert a creature let you do so as you declare it as an attacking creature. You can't do so later in combat, and creatures put onto the battlefield attacking can't be exerted.
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Can you block a creature that comes in tapped and attacking?

Yes. Once a creature is declared a blocker against an attacking creature, that creature is considered 'blocked' for the remainder of combat, even if the blocking creature is removed from combat/the battlefield. A tapped creature would still deal damage/be dealt damage as normal in combat.
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Do creatures that enter tapped and attacking trigger attack triggers?

Similarly, “Whenever [a creature] attacks [a player, planeswalker, or battle], . . .” triggers if that creature is declared as an attacker attacking that player or permanent. Such abilities won't trigger if a creature is put onto the battlefield attacking.
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Can you attack with a tapped creature?

Yes, you can target a tapped creature with spells or abilities that say "tap target creature," but it won't do anything because it's already tapped, and effects that trigger on tapping won't happen. You can also attack with a tapped creature if it has Vigilance, but normally, creatures must be untapped to attack. A tapped creature can still block or be targeted by effects like "fight," but it can't be declared as an attacker unless it has Vigilance or is otherwise allowed. 
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The Combat Phase - Step by step, EVERYTHING you need to know - MTG Foundation Rules

How do tapped and attacking work?

In Magic: The Gathering, declaring attackers taps them (unless they have Vigilance), but "tapped and attacking" creatures don't trigger "when you attack" effects because they weren't declared as attackers during the Declare Attackers step; "attacking" is a status, while "attacked" is the action of being declared, with some cards (like Berserker's Onslaught via Scryfall) caring about the status, not the declaration. A creature that enters the battlefield tapped and attacking (like from Myriad or Winota, Joiner of Forces via Scryfall) is considered "attacking," but it never "attacked," so its own "when this creature attacks" triggers won't happen, though other abilities might still work. 
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Can you use a creature's ability if they are tapped?

Yes, tapped creatures can use abilities in Magic: The Gathering, but not if the ability requires tapping the creature as part of its cost (like "Tap: Do something"). Static and triggered abilities work fine while tapped, but you can't activate a tap ability if the creature is already tapped or has summoning sickness (unless it has Haste or another effect allows it). 
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Does tapping an attacking creature remove it from combat?

Tapping or untapping a creature that's already been declared as an attacker or blocker doesn't remove it from combat and doesn't prevent its combat damage.
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What is the rule 603.4 in Magic The Gathering?

603.4. A triggered ability may read “When/Whenever/At [trigger event], if [condition], [effect].” When the trigger event occurs, the ability checks whether the stated condition is true. The ability triggers only if it is; otherwise it does nothing.
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Can you have multiple triggers?

Multiple triggers can be configured using an list of triggers, or wildcard event triggers.
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Can I play an instant after blockers are declared?

Yes, you absolutely can play an instant spell after blockers are declared but before combat damage is dealt; this is a crucial part of Magic: The Gathering combat, allowing players to buff creatures, kill blockers, or change the combat math. After blockers are announced, there's a round of priority where both players can cast instants and activate abilities before damage is assigned, a key moment for combat tricks. 
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Can I be attacked if I have protection from everything?

Yes, you can still attack someone with "protection from everything," but they won't take damage from your creatures, spells, or abilities; the attack itself isn't stopped, just its harmful effects (targeting, damage, enchanting, blocking) are prevented by the protection, so you'd need non-targeting, unpreventable, or life-loss effects to win. 
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Does untapping a creature stop it from attacking?

Yes, if you untap an attacking creature in Magic: The Gathering, it is still considered attacking and will deal combat damage, unless a specific card effect says to remove it from combat. Untapping it simply makes it untapped, allowing it to potentially block on the next turn or use abilities that require it to be untapped, but it doesn't cancel its current attack. 
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Can you exert combat celebrant if it enters attacking?

No, you cannot exert Combat Celebrant if it enters the battlefield already attacking (e.g., via an effect like Winota, Joiner of Forces or a token copy), because the exert ability is an optional cost paid only when you declare it as an attacker during the Declare Attackers step, and it misses that window if it just appears attacking. It must be present to be chosen as an attacker to trigger its own "when it attacks" ability for exerting. 
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Can you block a tapped and attacking creature?

You can block your opponent's attacker and then tap it to activate its ability before damage. When damage happens, despite your creature now being tapped, it's still blocking the attacker, and those creatures deal damage to each other as normal.
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Does an exerted creature ever untap?

Can I Untap an Exerted Creature? Exert only states that an exerted creature won't untap during its controller's next untap step, but it doesn't prevent it from untapping through other means. You can absolutely untap an exerted creature through means other than the untap step.
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What is the rule 701.27 A in Magic The Gathering?

701.27a To proliferate means to choose any number of permanents and/or players that have a counter, then give each one additional counter of each kind that permanent or player already has.
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What is the rule 704.5 in Magic The Gathering?

704.5. The state-based actions are as follows: 704.5a If a player has 0 or less life, that player loses the game. 704.5b If a player attempted to draw a card from a library with no cards in it since the last time state-based actions were checked, that player loses the game.
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What is the 75% rule in Magic The Gathering?

The MTG "75% rule" is a popular, unofficial deck-building philosophy, mainly for Commander, about creating decks powerful enough to compete but not so dominant they ruin the fun for casual players, finding a middle ground in power level by intentionally leaving out the most optimal, expensive, or meta-defining cards. It's about building a deck that's "75% as strong as it can be," allowing it to challenge optimized decks occasionally while still being fair in more casual games, making it adaptable for various playgroups.
 
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Can I tap a creature that's already tapped?

Yes, you can target a tapped creature with a spell or ability that says "tap target creature," but it doesn't change the creature's state (it's still tapped), so it usually has no practical effect unless the card has a secondary effect for targeting already tapped creatures (like some "freeze" effects) or you're responding to something. However, you cannot tap an already tapped creature to pay a cost that requires tapping, as that cost must be paid with an untapped permanent. 
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How does tapped and attacking work in MTG?

In Magic: The Gathering, a creature declared as attacking taps as part of the process and remains "attacking" even if untapped later; however, a creature that enters the battlefield tapped and attacking was attacking but never "attacked" (the specific action), meaning it won't trigger "When this creature attacks" effects but will count for "Whenever you attack" or "If this creature is attacking" effects, dealing damage normally unless removed from combat. 
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Can I tap an attacking creature with vigilance?

Yes, you can tap an attacking creature with vigilance using its own tap ability or an external effect, because vigilance only stops the act of attacking from causing it to tap, not other effects; tapping it doesn't remove it from combat, but it does prevent it from blocking later. You can activate its tap ability during the combat phase (like during Declare Blockers), or have another card tap it before or after it attacks, as long as you have priority.
 
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Can a creature fight if it's tapped?

Yes, a tapped creature can "fight" in Magic: The Gathering because fighting is a specific mechanic (creatures deal damage to each other) that isn't the same as attacking or blocking, so tapping restrictions don't apply, and it can even fight if it has summoning sickness. A tapped creature can be targeted by a "fight" spell or ability, and it will deal damage equal to its power, just like an untapped one, because "fight" is not combat.
 
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Can I put a stun counter on a tapped creature?

Yes, you absolutely can put a stun counter on a tapped creature in Magic: The Gathering; the stun counter prevents it from untapping, and if it's already tapped, the effect just adds the counter, stopping it from untapping again in the future (removing one counter each time it tries). Effects that say "tap target creature" still work on already tapped creatures, and the stun counter is applied as normal. 
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Can you phase out a tapped creature?

Phasing (This phases in or out before you untap during each of your untap steps. While it's phased out, it's treated as though it doesn't exist.) : Target creature phases out. (While it's phased out, it's treated as though it doesn't exist.
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