Edited Vinicius Quaiato (Dec. 5, 2016 04:19:20 PM)
During a game, players may look at their own sideboard, keeping it clearly distinguishable from other cards at all times
A deck is not shuffled if the judge believes a player could know the position or distribution of one or more cards in his or her deck
Edited Andrew Keeler (Dec. 5, 2016 10:48:39 PM)
3.5: Removed Example E, (sideboard and deck get mixed), as this is now Hidden Card Error.
The player does not repeat the instruction or partial instruction (if any) that caused the infraction.
Originally posted by Matt Marheine:
TLDR: 2 on bottom and 13 on top are known locations, so apply HCE remedy only to those cards.
Siyang Li
I agree this falls under HCE, but I am toying with the idea, that since the number of the original deck cannot be confirmed and the number now is legal, we keep the known cards (scried 2) to the bottom and simply shuffle the rest, then let the game continue. Of course, with a warning from HCE for Anton. Would anyone think that's acceptable?
Edited Andrew Keeler (Dec. 6, 2016 01:53:10 PM)
Originally posted by Graham Theobalds:Exactly!
It's like the coin toss that lands on the side ?
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
Just in case it wasn't already obvious, there will not be an ‘O’fficial answer from me.
A player drops cards onto their library, and they not only don't notice that, but the cards land so perfectly that it's not immediately apparent afterwards?
Edited Vinicius Quaiato (Dec. 6, 2016 07:27:05 PM)
Originally posted by Andrew Keeler:
If we're doing that we're really ruling Insufficient Shuffling, since we're applying the Insufficient Shuffling fix. Since there is a high ceiling for abuse, I don't know that we can simply say “your penalty is having those extra cards remain in your deck.” Since a player is claiming they have an extra 15 cards in their deck, just like if a player is claiming they have an extra card in their hand, HCE specifies that we remove the excess cards.
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