Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
The grumpy curmudgeon in me wants to agree with Bryan (and others), but - just like that other discussion, linked by René, NAP's poor choice of words doesn't excuse AP's assumptions.
In this example, and in those others, all AP has to do is say something like “it doesn't target” or “so it's resolving?”, or even "do you mean choices?", any of which avoids the problems caused by NAP's wording and AP's assumptions about that wording.
Edited Jasper König (Oct. 20, 2015 10:35:26 AM)
Originally posted by Jasper König:
There's a simple principle I apply to most situations in which a communicative ambiguity results in a problem and I as a judge have to decide what has happened and what has not: My ruling will usually not be in favor of the player who created the ambiguity, and I will held all players to the common standards of players communication.
NAP created the ambiguity, and most players would have understood the question exactly like AP did. We need to rule accordingly.
Edited Justin Turner (Oct. 20, 2015 10:57:57 AM)
Originally posted by Justin Turner:Exactly. That's why “you had to be there” keeps cropping up. And some very experienced judges have landed on opposite sides of this - because, after all, we *weren't* there.
this can be ruled both ways due to the ambiguity
Tomas SukaitisOh, so you KNEW that wasn't correct wording, and you were intentionally misleading your opponent to gain an advantage, eh?
I'll go “aha, I want to respond by casting those spells”
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
Oh, so you KNEW that wasn't correct wording, and you were intentionally misleading your opponent to gain an advantage, eh?
Yeah, I don't think that's a conversation you'll want to have with me.
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:Does this go both ways? If AP knows that the spell has no targets, but chooses intentionally to interpret NAP's question as a shortcut to resolution anyway?
Oh, so you KNEW that wasn't correct wording, and you were intentionally misleading your opponent to gain an advantage, eh?
Yeah, I don't think that's a conversation you'll want to have with me.
Originally posted by Eli Meyer:
Does this go both ways? If AP knows that the spell has no targets, but chooses intentionally to interpret NAP's question as a shortcut to resolution anyway?
Edited Charles Featherer (Oct. 21, 2015 09:53:02 AM)
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
Oh, so you KNEW that wasn't correct wording, and you were intentionally misleading your opponent to gain an advantage, eh?
Yeah, I don't think that's a conversation you'll want to have with me.
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