No. Because Polymerization is not a Quick-Play Spell Card, it cannot be activated in the Battle Phase.
If you attacked with the Fusion Material Monsters, you could not play Polymerization as it would still be the Battle Phase. As a result, you must end your Battle Phase, and switch to your Main Phase 2 to activate Polymerization. Even if you activated it during this phase, it would have already been after your Battle Phase; and because you can only have one Battle Phase per turn, this strategy would not work.
You could, however, use Super Polymerization as an alternative. Because it is a Quick-Play Spell Card, it would fit into this strategy.
Super Polymerization
SPELL/Quick-Play
Discard 1 card. Send, from either side of the field to the Graveyard, Fusion Material Monsters that are listed on a Fusion Monster Card, and Special Summon that monster from your Extra Deck. (This Special Summon is treated as a Fusion Summon.) Spells, Traps, and Effect Monsters' effects cannot be activated in response to this card's activation.
They 'can' attack directly, meaning they are free to attack the opponent's monsters instead if you wish.
Patrician of Darkness only allows you to choose the target monster of your opponent's attack. It does not make you attack another monster on your field.If you have multiple monsters on the field in addition to Patrician of Darkness, you can choose which of your monsters that your opponent must target when he or she attacks.
It doesn't matter who 'owns' the monster, all that matters is the current controller. If I steal your monster, and attack your other weaker monster with it, it's you who takes the damage because 'your' monster is 'mine' at the moment, no different to my other monsters. If you attack the stolen monster with a stronger one, the same applies, I control the weaker monster, so I take the damage.
In general, if one effect tells you to do something, and another effect says you cannot do that thing, the can't effect will win out. So if a monster says it must attack, it doesn't win out over an effect which says it can't attack. If a monster can attack all of the opponent's monsters, this does not override the effect which makes one of them unable to be selected as an attack target.
Yes you can but only if you have not summoned a monster already that turn. You can only summon or set a monster once per turn. You can summon a monster during main phase 1 or main phase 2 Draw phase Standby phase Main phase 1 Battle phase Main phase 2 End phase
Polymerization is used to Fusion Summon Fusion Monsters from your Extra Deck in Yu-Gi-Oh!. You do not create a "new" monster out of thin air. You must have included the Fusion Monster you are trying to Summon in your Extra Deck. You must also fuse the monsters that are listed on the Fusion Monster.To Fusion Summon a Fusion Monster, you activate Polymerization (unless specifically stated otherwise, such as on XYZ-Dragon Cannon) and send the appropriate Fusion Material Monsters to the Graveyard (from your Hand or your side of the field). Once this criteria is met, place the appropriate Fusion Monster on the field in face-up Attack or Defense Position. Note that this is treated as a Fusion Summon.PolymerizationSPELL/NormalSend Fusion Material Monsters that are listed on a Fusion Monster Card from your Hand or your side of the field to the Graveyard, and Special Summon that Fusion Monster from your Extra Deck.
Answer taken from the Offical English Rulebook: If you have all the Fusion Material Monsters listed on the Fusion Monster Card (either on the field or in your hand) you can activate "Polymerization," placing it in your Spell & Trap Card Zone. After sending the Fusion Material Monsters to the Graveyard, take the appropriate Fusion Monster from your Extra Deck and play it onto the field in either face-up Attack or Defense Position. Finally, place the "Polymerization" card in the Graveyard. Remember that in order to use a Fusion Monster during a Duel it needs to be in your Extra Deck. Since Fusion Summons require specific cards, be sure and include those necessary cards in your Main Deck!
Of course not. You cannot declare an attack on the opponent's lifepoints if they have a monster, unless one of your monsters has an effect that allows it to attack directly.You'll just have to deal with their monster using Spells or Traps, a monster effect, or by boosting the ATK of one of your monsters.
Yes, because it is a quickplay and can be activated during the battle phase.
They 'can' attack directly, meaning they are free to attack the opponent's monsters instead if you wish.
Assuming the defending monster is also in attack position, both monsters will be destroyed.
Yes, De-Fusion is Quickplay so you can attack with the Fusion Monster, then use De-Fusion on it, and since it's still the battle phase, the newly summoned components can attack too.
Yes, but you have to attack one at a time. Now if your talking about attack one monster with all your monsters the answer is no.
Ra's attack and defence is equal to the combined attack and defence of the monsters tributed for its summon. You can also tribute other monsters to increase Ra's attack and defence by that monster. When Ra is summoned from the graveyard (monster reborn etc.) it has 0 attack and defence as no monsters were tributed for it
Patrician of Darkness only allows you to choose the target monster of your opponent's attack. It does not make you attack another monster on your field.If you have multiple monsters on the field in addition to Patrician of Darkness, you can choose which of your monsters that your opponent must target when he or she attacks.
Yes, two Malefic monsters can attack on the same turn, but this is a rare situation considering all Malefic monsters state, There can only be 1 face-up "Malefic" monster on the field, and a couple also say, Other monsters you control cannot declare an attack.However, if you were to somehow attack with one Malefic monster, remove it from the field, and summon another one, the second Malefic monster will be able to attack.
If you're talking about monster zone 'columns', then these have nothing to do with attack declarations. A monster on one player's side of the field is able to attack the monsters on the opponent's field, regardless of which column they are in.