Edited Matt Marheine (Feb. 3, 2016 02:45:55 PM)
Originally posted by Eli Meyer:
Dan, this feels wrong to me. When I discussed this in the Northeast slack, the situation was a little different–cause I had Al(l)an ask “and I get two zombies?”
I hate hate hate situations where saying the exact right phrasing make the difference between a legit bluff and an infraction bordering on cheating. But in this case, by stating that Norma's creature don't go to the yard and that he does definitely get two zombies, I feel as though he's misrepresenting the rules and the state of the game.
Originally posted by Dan Collins:
Has either player done anything illegal?
Originally posted by James Do Hung Lee:
As Eli pointed out above, this is not exactly the wrong player making the choice. We cannot make rulings because of having to know if a sentence is toned as a question for confirmation or a statement to mislead. If you consider language issues further, this becomes even more muddy.
The opponent is NOT making a choice for the player. The opponent IS citing one potential, correct outcome and the player is confirming that choice. The player's agreement is that choice. Nothing illegal happened here. Our intervention is Outside Assistance because we are now giving play advice.