Free information is information to which all players are entitled access without contamination or omissions made by their opponents.
Details of current game actions and past game actions that still affect the game state.
Derived information is information to which all players are entitled access, but opponents are not obliged to assist
in determining and may require some skill or calculation to determine.
All characteristics of objects in public zones that are not defined as free information.
If an opponent requires information about the precise timing of a triggered ability or needs details
about a game object that may be affected by a resolved triggered ability, that player may need to
acknowledge that ability’s existence before its controller does.
Edited Jonas Breindahl (June 15, 2016 07:46:26 PM)
Originally posted by Shawn Doherty:This is Prowess, not exalted–the sorcery was cast Main 1 :-)
2) If we are still in Declare Attackers step, then the trigger hasn't even
had a chance to be missed yet.
IPG 2.1
A triggered ability that affects the game state in non-visible ways: The controller must make the change known by the first time the change has an effect on the visible game state.
If Nathan hadn't heard the word base I think I would back up the game to the point of confusion and let Nathan choose to block or not. If Nathan were honest and admitted to hearing the word “base” I would rule no missed trigger and not back up.
Edited Gregory Farias (June 17, 2016 09:36:34 AM)
Originally posted by Nathaniel Lawrence:
I'm sitting here puzzling how this differs from a situation like a foreign copy of Vampire Nighthawk and being told “It's a 2/3 with flying” and intentionally neglecting to mention it also has deathtouch; this is technically allowed and would not warrant any sort of backup if acted upon, instead reminding the player that they're entitled to the Oracle text of the card, but their opponent is not obliged to present it to them - only that they cannot speak incorrectly if they do. If we can assert that Anne spoke correctly, what does it matter if Nathan misinterpreted it? Should we not instead insist that the policy is that triggers are assumed remembered until demonstrated as missed at the point of no return (e.g. when combat damage is being dealt)?
I'm not against the solution that we ought to back up in case there was confusion - moreover that I wonder about the precedent that already exists, or perhaps whether my understanding of that precedent is incorrect.
Originally posted by Christopher Wendelboe:
The question asked was very clear, though perhaps could have been clearer. What Nathan was really asking was “am I dead if I don't block this”. This is pretty obvious to us, is very obvious to him, and is also very obvious to Anne. Answering the question with information that is not relevant is similar to if I were to ask you, “Is the sky blue?,” and you respond with “The grass is green.” It's even more muddled in this case as it's very easy for that one little word “base” to be missed, especially in a noisy room.
Originally posted by Daniel Ruffolo:
Doesn't a triggered ability that causes a change in the visible game state have to be acknowledged before any game action that can only be taken after the ability has resolved?
Originally posted by Daniel Ruffolo:
Prowess triggered in main 1. My read is that Anne can't go into combat without that trigger resolving, and so by going into combat and declare attackers without acknowledging the trigger, it has been missed.
Originally posted by Francesco Scialpi:Christopher Wendelboe
The question asked was very clear, though perhaps could have been clearer. What Nathan was really asking was “am I dead if I don't block this”. This is pretty obvious to us, is very obvious to him, and is also very obvious to Anne. Answering the question with information that is not relevant is similar to if I were to ask you, “Is the sky blue?,” and you respond with “The grass is green.” It's even more muddled in this case as it's very easy for that one little word “base” to be missed, especially in a noisy room.
Actually, this reminds me of a classic example.
AP: "If I attack with my flying creature, can you block with your Giant Mantis?“
NAP: ”well, my creature doesn't fly“
AP: ”I attack“
NAP: ”I block"
This trick is considered legal. AP has attacked, NAP can block, no step back.
Originally posted by Christopher Wendelboe:While I'm not happy about Anne's verbal trickery, and agree with Mark and others that - esp. with any language barrier - miscommunication must be considered, the bottom line for me is “Check your assumptions, don't act on them.” (I even made that exact announcement, midway through day 2 of Grand Prix Charlotte, because I'd refereed so many disagreements based on assumptions.)
Granted, the player should assume it's a 3/3 and act accordingly…
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