If a player made an illegal choice (including no choice where required) for a static ability generating a
continuous effect still on the battlefield, that player makes a legal choice.
Edited Lyle Waldman (Dec. 3, 2015 01:18:51 AM)
Originally posted by Lyle Waldman:
I would be inclined to treat this as a missed trigger and ask NAP if he would like to put AP's trigger on the stack. I realize this may be a deviation, but I feel as though the possibility of abuse is high enough that the deviation is justified.
Originally posted by Dustin De Leeuw:As Dustin explained, potential for abuse isn't a factor when I decide to deviate (rarely); it's really only a factor in the investigation.
If it's not cheating, don't worry about the potential for abuse.
Originally posted by Dustin De Leeuw:Slight nitpick here, but Voice of All naming nothing can happen a number of ways–for instance, Mastery of the Unseen. Artifact is definitely illegal though! :)
A Voice of All naming nothing or “artifact” is clearly illegal, this can never happen in a game, and hence the game can't continue like this
Originally posted by Dustin De Leeuw:
As Eli pointed out, the partial fix does not apply here, because Vesuva does not create a static ability. This is not just a technicality, it's an extremely important distinction! A Voice of All naming nothing or “artifact” is clearly illegal, this can never happen in a game, and hence the game can't continue like this. However, a Vesuva pretending to be a Radiant Fountain is perfectly fine; in this case, the game could not have reached this situation in a legal way, but the current situation is perfectly legal and does not need addressing.
Originally posted by Lyle Waldman:
I apologize, but I appear to be having difficulty determining the difference between Vesuva's effect and Voice of All's effect. Both are replacement effects, as they both begin with the word “as”, and both create a continuous ability (i.e. an ability that has a duration and is not triggered or activated). So where is the difference? I'm not sure I see in the text of the cards where the distinction is.
If a player made an illegal choice (including no choice where required) for a static ability generating a continuous effect still on the battlefield, that player makes a legal choice.
Edited Abraham Corson (Dec. 3, 2015 10:01:18 PM)
Originally posted by Abraham Corson:This is more or less what I was going for; sorry if it wasn't clear enough!. Essentially, my point was that Vesuva generated a copy effect which happens to be continuous and indefinite, whereas Meddling Mage and Voice of All both have linked abilities that are continuously generating their continuous effect.
If Vesuva has already copied a Radiant Fountain (albeit illegally), then it no longer has any of it's originally abilities due to the nature of copy effects. Therefore, it could not really be said that this is a static ability still on the battlefield. So, you could argue that the partial fix still doesn't apply for this reason.
Originally posted by Eli Meyer:Abraham CorsonThis is more or less what I was going for; sorry if it wasn't clear enough!. Essentially, my point was that Vesuva generated a copy effect which happens to be continuous and indefinite, whereas Meddling Mage and Voice of All both have linked abilities that are continuously generating their continuous effect.
If Vesuva has already copied a Radiant Fountain (albeit illegally), then it no longer has any of it's originally abilities due to the nature of copy effects. Therefore, it could not really be said that this is a static ability still on the battlefield. So, you could argue that the partial fix still doesn't apply for this reason.
Originally posted by Lyle Waldman:If Vesuva loses all abilities (Blood Moon, Humility if Vesuva happens to be copying Dryad Arbor), Vesuva remains a copy of whatever it copied. If Voice of All loses all abilities (Humility, Sudden Spoiling) it no longer has protection.
I feel like that difference is both semantic in nature and also technically incorrect (the best kind of incorrect! /Futurama). The reason being: Let's say for a moment that you are correct and that Vesuva's effect is past tense and is no longer generating the copy effect. Then why is Vesuva still a copy of the land it is copying? If the copy effect is no longer being generated, then it should cease to be a copy and revert back to being a Vesuva.
You must be registered in order to post to this forum.