Originally posted by Nick Rutkowski:
Eric, the method you propose gives hidden information to Andrew by letting him know that his opponent doesn't have a response.
Both players are required to pass priority for anything to happen in the game. We don't want to deny Norbert his option to do something or nothing. He's allowed to bluff.
Originally posted by Nick Rutkowski:
Both players are required to pass priority for anything to happen in the game. We don't want to deny Norbert his option to do something or nothing. He's allowed to bluff.
Originally posted by Nathaniel Lawrence:
It seems to me that there are a whole bunch of steps being “skipped” here and that's more of a root problem than the sudden extra card. If Norbert is objecting on the grounds that he may have had a response to Andrew's actions, regardless of what that response is, my first instinct is to (with HJ approval) rewind to casting Stormbreath Dragon (Return a random card from Andrew's hand to his library, untap Stormbreath Dragon, and return it to the stack).
Edited Jasper König (Oct. 9, 2013 02:36:27 PM)
Originally posted by Joseph Wiesenberg:
I strongly disagree that this should ever be DEC. The extra card is a red herring. The real issue is that one player has attempted to progress the game to a point that the other player is not ready to be at. I see two reasons not to issue DEC here:
1) The IPG has language about an infraction not being DEC if it occurred as a result of/immediately after a prior GRV, and Andrew skipping several priority passes to resolve his bident trigger sounds like a GRV to me. Although the scenario as presented says that Norbert felt he didn't have time to respond, Andrew was resolving a lot of actions, so Norbert at least had the opportunity to notice what was happening. Andrew got sloppy and shortcutted too aggressively, but he didn't magically end up with an extra card.
2) Issuing DEC establishes a precedent that you can get game losses for opponents by not acknowledging their card draw effects and then calling a judge “because I wanted to respond”. If Andrew picks up a DEC GL here then it sets an expectation that any unclear communication about card draws will turn into a game loss for the player drawing the cards. This is quite poor and we don't want to incentivize players to sit on infractions committed by opponents prior to card draws, or intentionally communicate ambiguously, to go fishing for GLs.
For me personally, I just wouldn't infract here, and get permission to back the game up to the point at which Norbert wanted to respond. Not everything is an infraction and sometimes players just communicate poorly. If you must infract I think GRV is appropriate for skipping priority passes, but DEC is not a good outcome.
Edited Rebecca Lawrence (Oct. 9, 2013 04:42:24 PM)
Originally posted by Joseph Wiesenberg:
The real issue is that one player has attempted to progress the game to a point that the other player is not ready to be at. I see two reasons not to issue DEC here:
1) The IPG has language about an infraction not being DEC if it occurred as a result of/immediately after a prior GRV, and Andrew skipping several priority passes to resolve his bident trigger sounds like a GRV to me.
Originally posted by Joseph Wiesenberg:
Although the scenario as presented says that Norbert felt he didn't have time to respond, Andrew was resolving a lot of actions, so Norbert at least had the opportunity to notice what was happening. Andrew got sloppy and shortcutted too aggressively, but he didn't magically end up with an extra card.
Originally posted by Joseph Wiesenberg:
2) Issuing DEC establishes a precedent that you can get game losses for opponents by not acknowledging their card draw effects and then calling a judge “because I wanted to respond”. If Andrew picks up a DEC GL here then it sets an expectation that any unclear communication about card draws will turn into a game loss for the player drawing the cards.
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