Originally posted by Scott Marshall:Whoops, my bad!
Explaining why a post mysteriously disappeared…
John Brian McCarthyIsn't the short answer “yes”? He absolutely can buyback the spell, it's just a poor strategic decision because it will end up exiled anyway. This strikes me as similar to the persistently annoying "can I Spellskite this?" question.
The short answer here is “No.”
Originally posted by Riki Hayashi:
Eli, the question asked was “…can I Buyback it?” If you're getting technical, “Buyback it” isn't a specific enough phrase here. You can attribute it to the act of paying the cost or to the act of returning it to your hand as they kind of go hand in hand. You have to “buyback it” in order to “buyback it.” What? The answers to “Can I Buyback it?” might be:
1) “Yes. (You can pay the buyback cost.)”
2) “No. (You can pay the buyback cost, but it won't return the card to your hand.)”
Unless asked the very specific question “Can I pay the buyback cost?” I would much rather see judges answer the second way. I've had some people suggest that this is coaching or strategic advice. I disagree. It would be coaching to tell the player “You shouldn't pay the buyback cost because it won't do anything.” A direct answer like 2) might heavily imply a correct strategic course of action, but you aren't “advising” it.
Now because of the ambiguity of the question (is the player asking about paying the cost or returning the card to hand?), many people advocate asking for clarification. That's a fine tactic to take. But I will end with this thought. If you think that answering with 2) is coaching, then what are doing by asking clarifying questions?
Originally posted by Edward Bell:
What if the question was “Can I Spellskite it?” (to take this back to a topic we all understand)
Originally posted by John Brian McCarthy:
Please don't change the scenario - it just gets confusing when people reply to different prompts on the same thread. If you want to discuss that question, a new thread might be a better place to do so.
Thanks!
Originally posted by Riki Hayashi:For the record, I would never ever answer “yes” to this question! However, I also would not answer “no,” not just because it's poor customer service, but also because I think it's technically the wrong answer. I didn't mean to imply that the short answer was the best way to handle it–just trying to point out ways that this case is similar to another case (which has been discussed to death!)
Eli, the question asked was “…can I Buyback it?” If you're getting technical, “Buyback it” isn't a specific enough phrase here. You can attribute it to the act of paying the cost or to the act of returning it to your hand as they kind of go hand in hand. You have to “buyback it” in order to “buyback it.” What? The answers to “Can I Buyback it?” might be:
1) “Yes. (You can pay the buyback cost.)”
2) “No. (You can pay the buyback cost, but it won't return the card to your hand.)”
Unless asked the very specific question “Can I pay the buyback cost?” I would much rather see judges answer the second way. I've had some people suggest that this is coaching or strategic advice. I disagree. It would be coaching to tell the player “You shouldn't pay the buyback cost because it won't do anything.” A direct answer like 2) might heavily imply a correct strategic course of action, but you aren't “advising” it.
Now because of the ambiguity of the question (is the player asking about paying the cost or returning the card to hand?), many people advocate asking for clarification. That's a fine tactic to take. But I will end with this thought. If you think that answering with 2) is coaching, then what are doing by asking clarifying questions?
You can pay the buyback cost. Buyback tries put the card back to your hand. However, Flashback always stops a card from going to anywhere except exile - graveyard, hand, library. Doesn't matter. Flashback always wins.
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