So in real life you'd ask the simple question of “Why wont you show me
your sideboard?”. I'd probably ask that before most of the other
questions because the refusal would surprise me greatly and satisfying
my natural curiosity is a strong motivator.
And if the player answered along the lines of Lyle's comments then
it'd be a simple request for the player to fan them out on a table for
me.
On Mon, Aug 10, 2015 at 2:58 PM, Lyle Waldman
<
forum-20435-7826@apps.magicjudges.org> wrote:
> Kenji Suzuki
>
> Lyle Waldman
> Player A calls a judge. Player B refuses to let the judge see the sideboard.
>
>
> I think this action violate “Players must answer all questions asked of them
> by a judge completely and honestly, regardless of the type of information
> requested” in MTR 4.1.
>
> I'll tell player B that he must show his sideboard to judge by rules. If he
> refuse it again, then DQ is only option we have because he knowingly violate
> rules for advantage.
>
>
> My issue with this is that how do you know he's violating the rules “for
> advantage”? Playing devil's advocate here, but let's say the player has had
> cards stolen from him in the past and is extremely possessive of his cards,
> and doesn't even trust judges to take care of his cards properly. Therefore
> he's violating the rules, but not for advantage.
>
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Gareth Pye - blog.cerberos.id.au
Level 2 MTG Judge, Melbourne, Australia
“Dear God, I would like to file a bug report”