Can you use tap abilities when it's not your turn?

Yes, you can use tap abilities on an opponent's turn in Magic: The Gathering, as long as the creature doesn't have summoning sickness (meaning you've controlled it since the start of your most recent turn) and the ability isn't restricted (e.g., "activate only as a sorcery"). These "instant speed" abilities let you respond to things your opponents do, like tapping a creature to prevent it from blocking, or using a utility creature's ability for an effect.
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Can you use tap abilities on other people's turns?

Yes, you can use tap abilities on an opponent's turn in Magic: The Gathering, similar to casting an instant, as long as the creature isn't affected by "summoning sickness" (not under your control continuously since your last turn started) and the ability doesn't have other timing restrictions, allowing you to respond to your opponent's actions anytime you have priority. 
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Can you tap a card when it's not your turn?

As long as a card doesn't specify a restriction on when you can activate the tap ability, you can use it at any time you could cast an instant. For example, if you control a creature with a tap ability, you could activate that ability in response to an opponent's spell or during combat, even on their turn.
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When can I activate tap abilities?

You can activate tap abilities (like {T}: Do something) in Magic: The Gathering whenever you have priority, just like casting an instant, but only if the permanent isn't affected by summoning sickness (hasn't been under your control since your most recent turn starts), and if it has haste or if it was tapped by another effect, not attacking/blocking. You can use them during combat, your upkeep, or even on your opponent's turn, as long as the card doesn't have specific time restrictions (like "sorcery speed"). 
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Can you activate abilities at any time?

These abilities can usually be activated any time the player has priority and uses the stack, unless it says otherwise, or is a mana ability.
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The rule they don't tell you when you start playing... - Beginners guide to APNAP - MTG Rules

When can creatures use tap abilities?

A creature's activated ability with the tap symbol or the untap symbol in its activation cost can't be activated unless the creature has been under its controller's control continuously since their most recent turn began.
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Can I use tap abilities during combat?

Yes, you can use tap abilities during combat in Magic: The Gathering, but when you can use them matters: you can tap an untapped creature for an ability before it's declared as attacking (preventing the attack), or tap an untapped creature as a blocker (stopping the attacker), but tapping a creature already declared as attacking or blocking won't remove it from combat or stop its damage; for triggered abilities (e.g., "Whenever this creature becomes tapped"), they trigger after the tapping, even if it's from attacking. 
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What is the rule 709.5 in Magic The Gathering?

709.5e A player who controls a permanent that has one or more locked halves may pay the mana cost of a locked half of that permanent to give that permanent the appropriate unlocked designation. This cost is referred to as an “unlock cost.” This is a special action (see rule 116).
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Can I tap Llanowar Elves first turn?

No, you cannot tap a {!nav}Llanowar Elves the turn it enters the battlefield to get mana because of summoning sickness, which prevents creatures from attacking or using tap abilities until your next turn, unless the creature has haste or an effect gives it haste. You must wait until your next turn to tap it for mana, or play another card that gives it haste, like {!nav}{!nav}Rhythm of the Wild, allowing immediate activation.
 
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Can you tap artifacts when it's not your turn?

Can Artifacts Tap the Turn They are Played? Non-creature Artifacts can tap the turn they are played since they are not affected by summoning sickness. If the artifact is also a creature, or somehow becomes a creature – then it cannot tap the turn it was played.
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Can you use a card that's not activated?

If you don't activate the card, several things can happen: Inability to use the card: Some credit card issuers won't let you use the card until it's been activated. This means you won't be able to make purchases, get a cash advance or do anything else that requires the card to be active.
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Can I use tap abilities at instant speed?

Yes, you can use most tap abilities at instant speed in Magic: The Gathering, meaning you can activate them almost anytime you have priority (even during an opponent's turn or in response to spells), unless the card specifically says "activate only as a sorcery" or has other timing restrictions like "{Tap}: Activate only during your upkeep". The key exceptions are summoning sickness (a creature can't tap for abilities if it hasn't been under your control since your most recent turn started, unless it has Haste) and mana abilities, which have slightly different rules but are also very fast. 
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Can you use tap abilities with haste?

Yes, Haste allows a creature to use its activated abilities with a {tap} (or untap) symbol in their cost the same turn it enters the battlefield, bypassing "summoning sickness," but the creature must be untapped to do so. Haste only removes the restriction; if a creature enters tapped (e.g., from another effect), it can't use tap abilities, even with haste. 
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Can you tap a vehicle the turn you play it?

Yes. Because vehicles are just artifacts the abilities can be used the turn it enters and it does not have summoning sickness. However, if it becomes crewed it gains the creature supertype which will see that the permanent entered this turn, thus it has summoning sickness and can't activate tap abilities or attack.
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Can you use a tap ability while blocking?

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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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 respond to split seconds?

Note that players can still respond to split second with mana abilities and special actions like unmorphing a permanent. While a spell with Split Second is on the stack, no one can cast spells or activate non- mana abilities. Once the spell with Split Second resolves, that restriction goes away.
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What is the 116 rule in Magic The Gathering?

Rule 116 in Magic's official rulebook explains something called “special actions.” These are things a player can do during their turn that happen instantly and cannot be interrupted by other players. The most common example is playing a land. It just happens right away.
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When can you activate a tap ability?

You can activate tap abilities (like {T}: Do something) in Magic: The Gathering whenever you have priority, just like casting an instant, but only if the permanent isn't affected by summoning sickness (hasn't been under your control since your most recent turn starts), and if it has haste or if it was tapped by another effect, not attacking/blocking. You can use them during combat, your upkeep, or even on your opponent's turn, as long as the card doesn't have specific time restrictions (like "sorcery speed"). 
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Can you use tap abilities on an opponents turn?

Yes, you can use tap abilities on an opponent's turn in Magic: The Gathering, similar to casting an instant, as long as the creature isn't affected by "summoning sickness" (not under your control continuously since your last turn started) and the ability doesn't have other timing restrictions, allowing you to respond to your opponent's actions anytime you have priority. 
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Can I tap a creature without attacking?

No, you cannot just tap a creature in Magic: The Gathering without a reason; tapping is a cost or effect, not a free action, but you can tap creatures without attacking by using cards with {T} (tap) in their cost, like Springleaf Drum, or through card effects that force tapping, such as Opposition or Kiora's Follower. Tapping is a game action that happens when a creature attacks (unless it has Vigilance) or when an ability requires it to be tapped as a cost or effect.
 
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Can you tap a permanent that's already tapped?

No, you cannot tap a permanent that is already tapped to pay a cost (like {T} in an ability), but you can target a tapped permanent with a spell or ability that says "tap target permanent," in which case nothing happens to the permanent, and the rest of the effect still resolves. This distinction is crucial in Magic: The Gathering rules: an untapped permanent becomes tapped, but a tapped one remains tapped if told to "tap" again. 
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Can you use a tap ability during combat?

Yes, you can use tap abilities during combat in Magic: The Gathering, but when you can use them matters: you can tap an untapped creature for an ability before it's declared as attacking (preventing the attack), or tap an untapped creature as a blocker (stopping the attacker), but tapping a creature already declared as attacking or blocking won't remove it from combat or stop its damage; for triggered abilities (e.g., "Whenever this creature becomes tapped"), they trigger after the tapping, even if it's from attacking. 
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Can you tap an artifact at instant speed?

Yes, you can tap an artifact at instant speed in Magic: The Gathering, as long as the artifact's activated ability doesn't have a restriction like "activate only as a sorcery," allowing you to use it during your turn, your opponent's turn, or in response to other spells/abilities whenever you have priority. The tap symbol ({T}) on an artifact indicates a cost that can be paid almost anytime you could cast an instant, making it great for surprise plays, like tapping a creature before blockers are declared.
 
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