Originally posted by Dan Collins:
The judge is not a “table judge”, there to catch every possible game error.
He is there to administer the end of round procedure and get the match
result. If he catches a play error, great, but it's not his first priority
to watch for them.
I just want to add on to this that it isn't a failure of a judge to not catch an error in a match he is nearby. There's a large number of things that a judge could be paying attention to other than the exact play at hand.
If you're curious, here's some of the things I'll do when I stop by a table that besides paying attention directly to the match at hand:
Check life totals (to see if they're the same on lifepads)
See if there's a time extension
Try to catch myself up on the game state
Look at libraries to see if there's anything obviously fishy going on (without picking them up)
See if any of the cards look like obvious sideboard cards in game 1.
Try to figure out what deck they are playing.
Seeing if they have any handwritten tokens or are using imperfect tokens (so I can get them a better one at limited events)
Watching a specific player for slow play
Try to figure out why a specific card would be in a given deck
Watching a specific player for fishy behavior