What is the benefit of shroud MTG?

The main benefit of Shroud in Magic: The Gathering (MTG) is complete protection from all targeting, meaning no player, not even you, can target a permanent or player with Shroud with spells or abilities, which is great for locking down key threats or creatures with beneficial triggered abilities (like "Blood Artist") that don't need targeting, though it prevents you from using your own helpful spells (like auras or Aether Vial) on them. While mostly superseded by Hexproof, Shroud offers universal protection, stopping both opponents and yourself from targeting, but it doesn't stop non-targeting board wipes or effects.
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What is the point of shroud mtg?

Shroud is a keyword ability that prevents a permanent or player from being the target of spells or abilities.
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Why would I want shroud over hexproof?

Hexproof means that "your opponents" can not target that permanent, so it is a one- sided effect that gives you so much value ('cause you can target it). Shroud means that "no one" can target that permanent, not even you, so it is a kind of universal protection from targeting.
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Does shroud prevent destroying all creatures?

No, Shroud does not protect against "destroy all creatures" effects like {!nav}Wrath of God, because these spells don't use the word "target"; they affect every creature, so they bypass Shroud and Hexproof entirely, killing even shrouded creatures unless they have Indestructible or Protection. Shroud only stops spells/abilities that specifically name a creature as a "target," not global effects or sacrifices. 
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Does shroud prevent deathtouch?

No, Shroud does not prevent Deathtouch; a creature with Shroud will still die to a Deathtouch creature because Deathtouch deals lethal damage through combat without targeting, and Shroud only stops spells or abilities from targeting a creature, not non-targeted effects like combat damage. Even if a creature has Shroud, any amount of damage from a Deathtouch blocker or attacker is considered lethal, so the Shroud creature dies.
 
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What IS Shroud?!

Why was Shroud replaced with Hexproof?

According to Magic's head designer Mark Rosewater in an article about evergreen keywords: “We created hexproof because we found players were having problems with shroud. They understood that their opponents couldn't target their creatures but didn't get that they couldn't either.
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Does Shroud prevent +1 counters?

What you described is a triggered ability. Since the ability says target and shroud prevents targeting, you cannot put the +1/+1 counter on it.
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Can I proliferate a creature with shroud?

Proliferate does not target, so permanents with shroud or hexproof can still be chosen and will recieve additional counters.
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Can I target my own creatures if they have shroud?

No, you cannot target your own creatures with Shroud in Magic: The Gathering, because Shroud prevents any player (including you) from targeting the permanent with spells or abilities, meaning you can't enchant, equip, pump, or otherwise affect it with anything that uses the word "target". Shroud blocks both opponents and yourself from targeting, making it very protective but also difficult to enhance, unlike Hexproof which only stops opponents. 
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Does Shroud protect from Annihilator?

Shroud prohibits the object with it from being a target from something ANYONE controls, even you the controller of that object. Annihilator does NOT use the word target, therefore neither of the two aforementioned abilities will prohibit annihilator.
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Does Hexproof stop destroying all?

No, Hexproof does not protect from "destroy all creatures" effects because these spells don't use the word "target," so they bypass Hexproof's protection, affecting your hexproof creature along with the others. Hexproof only stops spells/abilities that specifically name your creature as a "target," like Murder, but not mass effects like Wrath of God, Damnation, or Blasphemous Act.
 
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Does shroud stop board wipes?

Shroud only protects it from being targeted. A board wipe doesn't target so it would be destroyed.
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Is shroud better than hexproof?

Neither is strictly "better"; Hexproof is generally more useful because it stops opponents from targeting your stuff, while letting you target it for buffs/equipment; Shroud is more restrictive, stopping everyone (including you) from targeting it, making it great for creatures with triggered abilities you don't need to interact with but terrible for equipping. Think of it this way: Hexproof is like a "No Trespassing" sign for your opponents, while Shroud is a "Keep Out" sign for everyone, including yourself.
 
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Can I equip a creature with shroud?

No, you generally cannot equip an equipment to a creature with Shroud because the standard "Equip" ability requires you to choose a "target creature," and Shroud prevents any spell or ability from targeting that creature, including your own. However, if an equipment attaches to a creature with Shroud via a non-targeting ability (like {Stonehewer Giant} or some triggered abilities), it will stay attached, but you can't equip another item to it while it has Shroud.
 
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Does shroud prevent auras in MTG?

It won't shut off any static, triggered or activated abilities but it stops it from being the target of those abilities. No. Shroud only prevents new things from targeting the shrouded thing. Protection from a color, however, will remove auras/equipments of that color from the protected thing.
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Why is Shroud good in MTG?

MTG Shroud is a powerful mechanic. It can protect creatures from spells that target them. And it can synergize with other card abilities.
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What does Shroud prevent MTG?

Shroud has nothing to do with blocking. It just prevents the creature from being targeted by spells or abilities (either yours or an opponent's, unlike hexproof which only stops opponents from targeting it.)
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What is Shroud's super power?

Prediction Algorithm: Much like he enhanced his underlings with augmentations, Shroud has augmented himself with a microcomputer implanted in his head that allows him to calculate and discern the most likely course of action of the people around him to such a scarily high degree of accuracy that he appears to have near ...
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Does Shroud stop destroying all creatures?

No, Shroud does not protect against "destroy all creatures" effects like {!nav}Wrath of God, because these spells don't use the word "target"; they affect every creature, so they bypass Shroud and Hexproof entirely, killing even shrouded creatures unless they have Indestructible or Protection. Shroud only stops spells/abilities that specifically name a creature as a "target," not global effects or sacrifices. 
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Does proliferate double +1 +1 counters?

Instead of adding only one counter to each permanent or player, each proliferated permanent or player now gets one counter of each kind they already have. Proliferate is a great way to increase the number of loyalty counters on your planeswalkers, +1/+1 counters on your creatures and poison counters on your opponents.
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What is the rule 122 in Magic The Gathering?

See rule 122, “Counters.” 122.1. A counter is a marker placed on an object or player that modifies its characteristics and/or interacts with a rule, ability, or effect. Counters are not objects and have no characteristics.
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What kills Shroud in MTG?

If a creature has the shroud ability, it simply can't be targeted by a spell or ability. (even by yourself) But anything that removes it without targeting it works. AOE damage will get rid of it.
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Can I target my own creatures with shroud?

No, you cannot target your own creatures with Shroud in Magic: The Gathering, because Shroud prevents any player (including you) from targeting the permanent with spells or abilities, meaning you can't enchant, equip, pump, or otherwise affect it with anything that uses the word "target". Shroud blocks both opponents and yourself from targeting, making it very protective but also difficult to enhance, unlike Hexproof which only stops opponents. 
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Does Shroud unequip equipment?

No, Shroud in Magic: The Gathering doesn't remove already equipped items, but it prevents new equipment (or Auras/effects) from being attached because equipping targets, and Shroud stops all targeting, even by the owner. If a creature gains Shroud after being equipped, the equipment stays attached; you need to target the equipment itself (like with {L:Naturalize https://mtg.fandom.com/wiki/Naturalize} or {L:Disenchant https://mtg.fandom.com/wiki/Disenchant} in MTG) to remove it, not the creature.
 
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