Originally posted by Chuck Pierce:Nicolas Mihajlovic-Gendron
If you believe AP skipped his draw step, the card he drew after playing a land would be GPE-DEC and would result in a game loss? I don't believe that the GRV commited when AP skipped his draw step can be considered the root cause for the card drawn after playing a land. He skipped a draw, played a land, then illegaly drew a card.
In any case, I would still tend to treat the situation as if AP played a land during his upkeep, but I'm open to new ideas.
If she skipped her draw step, then she committed a GRV prior to drawing the extra card, so the infraction cannot be DEC. It doesn't matter whether skipping the draw step was or was not the “root cause for the card drawn,” all that matters is that she had already committed a GRV before drawing the extra card.
So, in this case, it doesn't really matter whether we decide that the player skipped her draw step, played a land in her main phase, then drew for her turn; or played a land during her upkeep and then drew for her turn. In both cases the infraction is a GRV (and the GRV happens prior to the card draw so we don't run into DEC). The justification changes what we write on the slip, but from the standpoint of the infraction, penalty, and fix, it's the same either way.
I personally would request a backup in this situation, regardless of whether the card was revealed or not. If it was, we can do a clean backup by putting the most recent card back on top, then the land (and adjusting the life totals accordingly) and have the player start their draw step correctly. If the card wasn't revealed, it's a bit messier because we have to take a random card from Anna's hand to undo the card draw, but I feel like that is less damaging to the game state than letting Anna keep the extra card she drew as a result of clearing a land off the top before drawing.
Originally posted by Nicolas Mihajlovic-Gendron:
I would like confirmation about that. From what I read and what seems logic to me, the IPG says the card has to be putted in hand as the result of a previous incorrect action. If you take this situation as if the player simply drew an extra card during his main phase, then none of the prior GRV led to it.
The phylosophy behind giving a game loss for DEC is that ‘'Though this error is easy to commit accidentally, the potential for it to be overlooked by opponents mandates a higher level of penalty’'
If any unrelated GRV commited prior (no defined timeframe) to the draw transforms it into a GRV, it would oppose that phylosophy.
-Hey did you just draw two cards?
-Eeee… yes but I forgot to untap this creature, so it's a GRV.
If I could get an official answer about this issue it would be awesome and would prevent me from doing more judging mistakes during my next events.
IPG 2.3
A player illegally puts one or more cards into his or her hand and, at the moment before he or she began the instruction or action that put a card into his or her hand, no other Game Rule Violation or Communication Policy Violation had been committed, and the error was not the result of resolving objects on the stack in an incorrect order.
Originally posted by Chuck Pierce:Nicolas Mihajlovic-Gendron
I would like confirmation about that. From what I read and what seems logic to me, the IPG says the card has to be putted in hand as the result of a previous incorrect action. If you take this situation as if the player simply drew an extra card during his main phase, then none of the prior GRV led to it.
The phylosophy behind giving a game loss for DEC is that ‘'Though this error is easy to commit accidentally, the potential for it to be overlooked by opponents mandates a higher level of penalty’'
If any unrelated GRV commited prior (no defined timeframe) to the draw transforms it into a GRV, it would oppose that phylosophy.
-Hey did you just draw two cards?
-Eeee… yes but I forgot to untap this creature, so it's a GRV.
If I could get an official answer about this issue it would be awesome and would prevent me from doing more judging mistakes during my next events.
From the definition of DEC in the IPG:IPG 2.3
A player illegally puts one or more cards into his or her hand and, at the moment before he or she began the instruction or action that put a card into his or her hand, no other Game Rule Violation or Communication Policy Violation had been committed, and the error was not the result of resolving objects on the stack in an incorrect order.
(Emphasis mine) So if a GRV had occurred before the extra card was drawn, then it doesn't fit this definition. While there is a small chance of a player leveraging that to avoid a GL, they also run the significant risk of getting a DQ for intentionally breaking the rules for an advantage.
Edited Nicolas Mihajlovic-Gendron (March 3, 2015 07:55:42 AM)
Originally posted by Lee Fisher:Is it possible to elaborate further on why this fix is acceptable here?
While we recognize the card returned from Anna’s hand to the top of her library may not be the one that was drawn, this is an acceptable fix and the chance of Anna gaining any advantage is extremely small.
Edited Mani Cavalieri (March 12, 2015 01:55:52 PM)
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