Originally posted by Dominik Chłobowski:Not really - the legality of the “double nickel” has changed, and it's never been OK to knowingly ignore an infraction … but what infraction is it, if you do a “double nickel”?
The legality of not calling a judge on an opponent's double nickel has changed.
Edited Lyle Waldman (Jan. 19, 2017 11:29:34 PM)
Originally posted by Pascal Gemis:Piles of five, repeated twice; another common version is six piles, then four. Try it out; start with a deck in decklist order, do either method, then look at the near-perfect “weave” of lands and spells.
Can someone define what à “double nickel” is?
Originally posted by Lyle Waldman:
I'm unsure in what case it is not in my best interest to call a judge, and instead 3-pile my opponent's deck, when I see my opponent attempt a double nickel, and hence I don't really understand the purpose of this discussion.
Originally posted by Riki Hayashi:Originally posted by Lyle Waldman:
I'm unsure in what case it is not in my best interest to call a judge, and instead 3-pile my opponent's deck, when I see my opponent attempt a double nickel, and hence I don't really understand the purpose of this discussion.
You're looking at the scenario as an outsider with perfect information where you “know that the player performed a double nickel.” Think about it as a judge who is called into the scenario part way through. A player is accusing his or her opponent of doing a double nickel. What if the opponent denies this? Do you DQ based solely on the accusation plus a fairly evenly distributed deck?
Now think about it from the point of view of the player making the accusation. Do you believe that it is a 100% DQ? Do you trust the judges enough to say that?
Edited Lyle Waldman (Jan. 20, 2017 01:07:01 AM)
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