Edited Christian Genz (May 24, 2016 08:19:09 AM)
Originally posted by Mark Mc Govern:
(3) If it's unclear which card he originally took, and we can't determine which card he's put back in the library, then he'll have to go ahead and get a new card as we can't fix anything.
Edited Francesco Scialpi (May 24, 2016 06:19:50 AM)
Originally posted by Isaac King:Nope.
Would others agree with this fix?
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
If you find yourself saying “reveal the entire library to the opponent”, please take a moment to consider that the HCE infraction and fix might not be the best answer. Yes, there are (very rare) cases where it will be the outcome - but please, don't try so hard to get HCE to fit.
Jorge Rua
If a player distractedly, shuffles his hand into his library, and the identity of the cards is not known, the infraction is GRV and the fixing is to leave the situation as it is. He is not entitled to buy a new hand.
IPG, HCE
A player commits an error in the game that cannot be corrected by only publicly avaliable information and does so without his or her opponent's permission.
This infraction only applies when a card whose identity is known to only one player is in a hidden set of cards both before and after the error. A set is a physically distinct group defined by a game rule or effect. It may correspond to a specific zone, or may only represent a part of a zone
Toby Elliott
Looks like the infraction was shuffling cards into their library that they weren’t supposed to! The HCE fix is to show the library to the opponent and let them choose the number of cards that are supposed to be in the hand – in this case, five, since that’s where they’re mulliganning to.
IPG, HCE
If this set contains more cards than it is supposed to contain, the player reveals the set of cards that contains the excess and his or her opponent chooses a number of previously-unknown cards sufficient to reduce the set to the correct size. The cards chosen are treated as excess cards. (…) Excess cards are returned to the correct zone.
Edited Philip Ockelmann (May 26, 2016 04:06:59 AM)
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