Originally posted by Scott Marshall:So according to this I would still say that putting the the card back is minimally disruptive since this fix is not complicated and afterwards the gamestate is closer to where it should be than before. Since the library was random before and now the player has a random card in his hand which his not known to his opponent although it should be.
I try to look at how the game state should be, if no error had occurred, then compare that to the game state that would result from applying a fix; if the fixed state is closer to what should be, and “better” than the way things are, then it might be minimally disruptive. (“Better” is yet another arbitrary judgment call…)
Also, is the fix complicated, with lots of moving parts? If so, it's likely to be fairly disruptive.
Edited Christian Genz (Sept. 9, 2015 01:56:00 PM)
So according to this I would still say that putting the the card back isIs it really closer to where it should be though? There's a card on top of
minimally disruptive since this fix is not complicated and afterwards the
gamestate is closer to where it should be than before. Since the library
was random before and now the player has a random card in his hand which
his not known to his opponent although it should be.
Am I really the only one finding it disturbing to give AP the chance for
an easy and hard to detect opportunity cheat and heavily disrupting the
game by applying the normal DEC fix while the downgrade is applicable?
Edited Cody Haines (Sept. 9, 2015 02:21:03 PM)
Originally posted by Cody Haines:Well the unfixed situation is with the player having a surplus card in hand which is pretty bad…
but I can't really see how it's closer to the ‘correct’ gamestate
than the ‘unfixed’ situation is.
Originally posted by Christian Genz:
Am I really the only one finding it disturbing to give AP the chance for an easy and hard to detect opportunity cheat and heavily disrupting the game by applying the normal DEC fix while the downgrade is applicable?
Originally posted by Eskil Myrenberg:something worries me about this statement since it was still APs trigger that led to the error. So AP attacks, his ability triggers, top card gets revealed and instead if staying on top of the library gets put into NAPs hand. This is as close to the classic Path to exile double/GRV as it can get (although I'm fully aware that in this case the card should not have changed zones but did, instead of being supposed to change zones and end up in the wrong zone, but it is still NAP misresolving APs trigger and AP having more than enough chances to spot the error…)
the
one not committing the infraction
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