Originally posted by IPG:
If a deck is discovered to be missing cards after the game has begun and the missing cards can be located, the Head Judge may downgrade the penalty to a Warning and shuffle those cards back into the deck.
John Eriksson
The way the first downgrade was explained to me was to use it only when it is unclear where the card has come from and/or if it is unclear if it was in the deck when it was presented. So if the cards was set to the side and it is 100% clear that it was not in the deck when the deck was presented to the opponent to shuffle, I would not use this downgrade.
So in you cases, player A would fix his deck, mulligan and get a downgrade, but player B would receive a Game Loss for presenting a 58 card deck.
Let's have a look at the Annotated IPG:
“Downgrade
If a deck is discovered to be missing cards after the game has begun and the missing cards can be located, the Head Judge may downgrade the penalty to a Warning and shuffle those cards back into the deck.
This covers the times when a player either drops a card and it’s only noticed once a game has started or has set aside some cards to indicate exiled but then forgets to shuffle them back into their library when the game ends. Normally both of these instances would result in a Game Loss because the player has presented a deck that doesn’t match their list. This downgrade allows the Head Judge to have the player shuffle the cards back into the library and only issue a warning instead.”
This does not clearly say to use the downgrade only when it is unclear whether the card was in the deck while presenting or not, but it does leave the decision to the Head Judge. I would also like a more fficial answer but until then I will stick to the advice given to me by Riccardo Tessitori. :)
Dan Collins
John, that used to be true, but is no longer. In the past, when a card was found on the floor or off to the side during the game, we investigated to determine whether we think a legal deck was presented or not. However, a lot of people didn't know that and automatically issued D/DLP and even when we did investigate, oftentimes you simply couldn't be sure.
So now we have this new downgrade that applies regardless of how and when the card became separated from the deck. This new policy takes away the step of investigating and replaces it with a consistent solution in lieu of a penalty. The downgrade is not conditional on when the card became separated from the deck. If it was exiled in game 1, and now it's game 2, and everyone is sure you presented 59, it is still downgraded. This is an easy error to make, which I suspect is a big part of the reason why it is no longer a Game Loss.
In response to your last point - that the IPG says the HJ “may” downgrade - I would expect HJs to apply the downgrade as written unless they have a compelling reason not to do so. The purpose of the IPG is to create consistent policy so that a player receives the same treatment regardless of whether they're at my PPTQ or yours. If you have a compelling reason, then sure, but don't decline to downgrade because you dislike the policy.
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