Originally posted by Markus Dietrich:
Sorry, Ihave to bring it up again: I'm also a bit confused by the example with Rummaging Goblin and the solution Scott gave for that compared to this. If this is DEC for the given reasons, shouldn't the error with the Goblin also always be DEC because the first thing the opponent can look out for that goes wrong is the drawing of the extra card no matter whether the controller first taps it or not?
Originally posted by Gareth Tanner:That is exactly what I'm confused about. Why is “not paying the correct cost” different from “not resolving the ability correctly”? Both can be done until the card is drawn (unless the players communicates well, but we have that in both scenarios I think)
With Rummaging Goblin the discard is part of the cost of the ability meaning the first “noticeable” error is not paying the correct cost, similar to only paying U for Brainstorm with Thalia in play.
Edited Markus Dietrich (March 18, 2015 08:54:34 AM)
Originally posted by George FitzGerald:
Head Judge may elect to downgrade the penalty to a Warning, and put both the land that Nathan played, and the card still in his hand, into the correct zone - the graveyard.
Edited Gregg Nakagawa (March 18, 2015 09:02:12 AM)
Originally posted by Loïc Hervier:
Moreover no explanation was given about why OoOS (thus no DEC) cannot apply here. Why is the sequence (Bolt Bolt {empty hand} draw draw discard discard) not a legal OoOS here please?
George FitzGerald
Since both cards were drawn into an empty hand, and it's minimal disruption to do so, the Head Judge may elect to downgrade the penalty to a Warning, and put both the land that Nathan played, and the card still in his hand, into the correct zone - the graveyard
George FitzGerald
The philosophy that led to the addition of the “GRV immediately prior = not DEC” phrasing in the IPG was based on the idea that the opponent, if paying attention, had a chance to see something going wrong and stop it before the card was drawn
Edited Marc Shotter (March 18, 2015 10:36:00 AM)
Originally posted by Marc Shotter:Indeed, but then you agree that (Bolt Bolt {empty hand} draw draw discard discard) is a legal OoOS if it is performed properly. In this hypothesis, the first thing that went wrong is not when Nathan drew a second card (legal in this OoOS) but when he takes another action: playing a land, instead of discarding.
Had the player flipped two cards off his library into his graveyard I'd have accepted OoOS as we've ended up at the right place
Edited Loïc Hervier (March 18, 2015 10:53:44 AM)
Edited Marc Shotter (March 18, 2015 11:09:35 AM)
Edited Venelin Gornishki (March 18, 2015 11:18:30 AM)