I started out being rather against the idea, but on further thought, I can
easily see a situation at a store with a very casual environment, where the
judge (personally close to the store and its players) decides to run the
GPT as a service for the store and players interested in some byes, where
such behaviour would be appropriate. The event is small, and possibly has
an awkward number of rounds (9-15 players). The judge is being paid an
inadequate compensation for the time (no, I will never ask a store to pay a
box for a 9-man GPT), the judge does spend some time once in a while
walking around the play tables and highly prioritizes tournament needs, and
looks up from his activities every few minutes to track what's going on as
well, and the TO is aware beforehand and agreeable to such behaviour. I
think a draft is too much, but an EDH game or trading seem like prime
activities for this scenario.
Due to such considerations, I would think it unfair if an RC automatically
assumed that a judge deciding to play some side EDH games or do other
activities on the side is acting unacceptably. Such situations should be
assessed on a case-by-case basis considering the judge's actual behaviour
during the event, and the actual attention being paid to the event. I also
think that different judges have different ability for such multitasking.
If the players are complaining about the attention you're paying to the
event, it's time to forget about the idea.
2016-07-19 15:11 GMT-04:00 Toby Hazes <
forum-28732-2e21@apps.magicjudges.org