Another difference is that in academy additional strikes of an attack are made by the attack, not directly by the original source of the attack. At least that's the way I remember it worded in the academy rule book.
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Not entirely. Academy says:
Doublestrike
This attack may make a second attack against the same target. The additional attack occurs before the Counterstrike Step of the attack.
So the attacker stays the same. There is just no
explicit "additional strikes" step like in Arena. But the cards say that the additional "attacks" (strikes) must happen before the counterstrike step. So no change to Arena there.
For me that is just adding to the confusion caused by using "attack" as a synonym for 2 different concepts.
Mage Wars uses:
When somebody attacks during his action:
-
Attack action (Arena): "All of these Steps are part of one
attack action. A creature may use one attack action to make multiple attacks"
-
Attack (Arena & Academy): "If a creature is the defender of a melee attack, and it has a quick action melee attack with the Counterstrike trait, it may use that attack against the attacker during the Counterstrike Step of the
attack."
A strike within the attack/attack action:
-
Attack (Arena & Academy): "Some creatures have a Defense attribute, which represents an ability to avoid an
attack."
-
Strike (Arena / carefully replaced by Attack in Academy): "Once the first strike is finished, you get to make these additional strikes."
So everywhere you read "Attack", you have to decode from the context: Is the whole thing meant (all strikes) or is a single strike meant?
This could have been avoided by consequently using the "an attack can contain strikes" terminology.
But instead this continues in Academy by saying Double strike executes a second attack after the first attack and still call the entire thing an attack as well "it may use that attack against the attacker during the Counterstrike Step of the attack". Obviously this does not make things clearer for defenses for example where "attacks" are avoided.
This could have been so easy if the rules had stuck to "Attack" containing "Strikes" terminology. Then you could have said: "All strikes of an attack are executed one after another" and "Defenses can only prevent the first strike of the first attack".
But I guess it is too late now. Too many cards out there.