Originally posted by Nathen Millbank:
I honestly have a hard time distinguishing the scenario in this knowledge pool and the anticipate scenario. In both cases, a player incidentally places a card he or she is thinking about in physical contact with their hand, which is lying on the table. In both cases, the opponent, the player, and the judge can point to a distinct card that should not be included as part of the hand. If the anticipate case isn't DEC, I don't see how this could be. If this is a DEC to you, where did this player cross the line?
Well, I think the first problem is the use of adjectives.
The use of “incidental”, “barely”, and “casual” with regards to the amount (and type) of contact are always going to make for a challenge in understanding what is happening. Because, I suppose one person could argue the KP scenario as “incidental contact” depending on how one wanted to view placing the card on the cards comprising the player's hand.
I would not agree, because the description in the KP scenario has the player placing the entire card on top of his hand. Compared to the situation with Anticipate, where the player set the card down so that only a corner of that card was touching another, there is a big difference in the actual physical action and amount of contact. You could try to quantify this, but I think that it is best to keep it a qualitative assessment. One where it is understood that reasonable people may disagree.
I also think you need to evaluate the nature of the player's action. In the KP scenario, the player sets the card down onto his hand; the player overlooked where he was setting the card, which is why the card is on top of his hand. In the Anticipate scenario, the player set the card so a corner of the card touched a card in his hand; the player didn't overlook where he was setting the card, which is why only the corner came into contact.
I also need to point out that my concluding paragraph: "Personally, I don't see this as DEC at any point. The card is not truly
'extra' in the normal sense of the infraction. The player should put the card in hand as part of the spell resolving. It's the
'putting back' and making a different choice that is a potential issue. Which, IMO, is not that problematic here."
I would submit that I've acknowledged with the Anticipate scenario that the card has been drawn per policy. What I would point out as a potential infraction is the putting back of the card; something I do not regard as an issue in that scenario, given the circumstances. The potential GPE-GRV is rendered moot, given the players understand what is going on; it's not ideal, as we'd prefer the player complete decisions and follow through on them. But I think we'd also recognize some leeway as well, given MIPG 2 and policies like OOoS.
In the KP scenario, however, the scryed card should
never come into contact with the player's hand. That element, on its own, is a pretty huge difference in the two scenarios. One that I think goes at the heart of the KP scenario versus the Anticipate scenario, and identifying what infraction has occurred here given the evaluation of the various elements in the MIPG.
I hope that more fully explains things.