Edited Jasper König (May 25, 2015 02:29:29 PM)
Originally posted by Federico Donner:
The example I heard is this: there is a Torpor Orb on the battlefield. Player A casts Emrakul and says “it's a shame, I won't get my extra turn because of the Orb” thinking that Emrakul's trigger is on EtB. Says go, player B untaps, draws, plays something and then they realize their mistake.
Originally posted by Federico Donner:
The example I heard is this: there is a Torpor Orb on the battlefield. Player A casts Emrakul and says “it's a shame, I won't get my extra turn because of the Orb” thinking that Emrakul's trigger is on EtB. Says go, player B untaps, draws, plays something and then they realize their mistake.
My opinion is that the player may be demonstrably aware of the trigger but if their actions fulfill the criteria for missed triggers, it is effectively missed.
Andrea Mondani
The example I heard is this: there is a Torpor Orb on the battlefield. Player A casts Emrakul and says “it's a shame, I won't get my extra turn because of the Orb” thinking that Emrakul's trigger is on EtB. Says go, player B untaps, draws, plays something and then they realize their mistake.
Misquoting a card's text sound very CPV to me, and that is the kind of infraction you can fix with a full backup :>
Originally posted by Ariel Adamson:
If the opponent was aware of the mistake at the time of the comment and allowed it to happen that is definitely some foul play that we can not ignore.
Originally posted by Andrea Mondani:
[Misquoting a card's text sound very CPV to me, and that is the kind of infraction you can fix with a full backup :>
Originally posted by Evan Cherry:
I'd interpret “Missed Trigger” as missing when it triggers. In this case, the extra turn triggered on casting. They erroneously thought it would trigger on ETB, so they thought it was gone past the point it should have already triggered.
I think normally we would assume it resolved when it mattered (such as “Take my next turn”), but the player has clearly indicated that the trigger was missed.
Originally posted by John Brian McCarthy:Evan Cherry
I'd interpret “Missed Trigger” as missing when it triggers. In this case, the extra turn triggered on casting. They erroneously thought it would trigger on ETB, so they thought it was gone past the point it should have already triggered.
I think normally we would assume it resolved when it mattered (such as “Take my next turn”), but the player has clearly indicated that the trigger was missed.
I'm not sure I agree here. Let's say that AP has a a Monastary Swiftspear out, and casts Brainstorm. After resolving the Brainstorm, he says, “Darn, I forgot about my Prowess trigger.” He then attacks, the opponent doesn't block, and he says, “Okay, take two.” It seems to me that saying that you forgot your trigger doesn't mean you missed it - until we hit a “demonstrate awareness” line specified by the IPG, you haven't missed it, even if you say something to the contrary.
Originally posted by John Brian McCarthy:
I'm not sure I agree here. Let's say that AP has a a Monastary Swiftspear out, and casts Brainstorm. After resolving the Brainstorm, he says, “Darn, I forgot about my Prowess trigger.” He then attacks, the opponent doesn't block, and he says, “Okay, take two.” It seems to me that saying that you forgot your trigger doesn't mean you missed it - until we hit a “demonstrate awareness” line specified by the IPG, you haven't missed it, even if you say something to the contrary.
Edited Evan Cherry (May 26, 2015 02:32:57 PM)
Originally posted by Evan Cherry:Andrea MondaniFederico DonnerMisquoting a card's text sound very CPV to me, and that is the kind of infraction you can fix with a full backup :>
The example I heard is this: there is a Torpor Orb on the battlefield. Player A casts Emrakul and says “it's a shame, I won't get my extra turn because of the Orb” thinking that Emrakul's trigger is on EtB. Says go, player B untaps, draws, plays something and then they realize their mistake.
Who misquoted whose card? Where would you back up to?
Justin PurcellAndrea Mondani
Misquoting a card's text sound very CPV to me, and that is the kind of infraction you can fix with a full backup :>
In this example, player B drew a card and played a land for the turn. Do you think it would be disruptive to rewind through that? Does it depend on the board state?
Edited Andrea Mondani (May 27, 2015 07:42:52 AM)
Originally posted by Andrea Mondani:There's a difference here between misrepresenting and misunderstanding derived information. You wouldn't issue a CPV to a player who Shocks a Harbor Bandit, says “kill your 2/2 guy”, and then feels sad because he didn't notice Watery Grave. In the original example Player A is misunderstanding derived information (game rules and Oracle text) and Player B isn't obligated to help him figure it out. Yes, there's a GPE as a result of the misunderstanding, but because the GPE being committed by Player A is ultimately a Missed Trigger, Player B also isn't obligated to either make note of it or even notice the error happened at all.
When he says that the Orb is preventing his trigger to work he's misrepresenting the game rules (implicitly saying that the text is an etb trigger instead of a when cast trigger). As game rules are derived information, misrepresenting them is CPV.
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
In John Brian's rather sneaky example, the player is bluffing that he's about to miss his trigger - but he doesn't. I'll admit, I don't much like that - but there are sneaky, less-than-sporting lines of play that I don't like but do allow…
Evan Cherry
We issue CPV and can back games up to protect a player from decisions made based on faulty information provided by their opponent. I'd say that indicating a missed prowess trigger on a 1/2 so I block with my 2/2 and you say “HAHA he's really 2/3!” is a play line chosen on intentionally mislead information.
Edited Hao Ye (May 28, 2015 01:55:53 PM)
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