Edited Toby Hazes (April 4, 2013 12:19:10 AM)
Originally posted by Toby Hazes:
Myers controls an Angelic Skirmisher. It's Briggs turn and she says “I would like to go to the attack step” and Myers says “Sure”. Where are we now in the turn? Briggs meant to go to the Declare Attackers Step, but Myers thought they were just going from the Main Phase to the “Attack Phase”, so in her mind they're in the Beginning of Combat Step with an Angel trigger on the stack.
Edited Toby Hazes (April 4, 2013 01:04:42 AM)
Originally posted by Toby Hazes:
Briggs does not explicitly mention the Declare Attackers step. While in her Main Phase, she only says she wants to go to the “Attack Step”.
Jonas' assumption has the scenario nailed down. After saying Myers said “Sure”, Briggs reaches for her creatures to attack, and Myers says that she still has a trigger to resolve.
Basically the question is, or at least the question I have is, what meaning can we give to “Attack Step”?
Edited Peter Richmond (April 4, 2013 01:05:18 AM)
Originally posted by Peter Richmond:
I would say explicitly the Declare Attackers step.
Originally posted by Toby Hazes:Peter Richmond
I would say explicitly the Declare Attackers step.
Sorry what do you mean with this exactly?
Edited Toby Hazes (April 4, 2013 01:21:35 AM)
Originally posted by Toby Hazes:
Well what was said was not even “Attackers Step” but “Attack Step”, but anyways, if it means “Declare Attackers Step” wouldn't that mean the trigger was missed?
Originally posted by Brian Schenck:Policy is not intended to be used by players as a strategy; it's intended to be used by judges to unravel the tangled webs woven by players - who, no matter what we do, simply will not play with the sort of technical precision that exactly matches the rules and policies.
I would be very careful with just how closely a judge parses the language the players use
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