Originally posted by Gregory Titov:
This does honestly seem like a simple dexterity error to me, players going through the motions of their turns and missing a small thing like this then catching it before much time has passed isn't a rare thing in magic.
Originally posted by Darren Horve:
Would you issue a GRV if someone goes to cast a Liliana of the Veil and puts down a Tarmogoyf and they recognize it right away?
Edited Jon Munck (May 12, 2016 09:22:02 PM)
Originally posted by Brian Schenck:I'm inclined to agree with Jon–this feels like an appropriate time to educate the players about careful play with a warning. While cheating is extremely unlikely here, both players nonetheless contributed to a damaged game state that (theoretically) allows for questionable play with unrecoverable information.
Right. I don't see this situation as a question of “The right ruling” as if it is an absolute. This is a question of judgement and assessment of the “most appropriate ruling” based on the scenario. Which seems a bit unique in some respects.
Each judge is going to come to a slightly different feeling here on how to handle this. So my hope for anyone reading this is to focus less on the should/shouldn't with this slightly “edge” scenario, but rather some of the reasoning behind each of the answers that have been provided.
That's not just important for a situation like this, but also for a more “cookie cutter” one where we do want the “right ruling” each and every time.
Originally posted by Darren Horve:
So you are thinking that she did not have Secure in hand when she ‘ cast’ it but drew it for turn? If that's the case. .. a GRV doesn't fit here- DQ for cheating does.
If we assume the error was an honest one- then a simple fix i think is best.
Remember our role as judges doesn't include jury and executioner.
Eskil Myrenberg
Marc: Your examples have additional issues, beyond merely the dexterity error. Seeing an additional card or not sharing information the opponent is privy to in your examples. Would you agree it doesn't necessarily apply here?
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