This infraction does not apply to simple dexterity errors, such as when a card being pulled off the library sticks to another card and is seen…This scenario pretty clearly falls into that category to me so I switch from my initial instinct to L@EC.
Edited Peter Calomeris (Feb. 8, 2017 06:55:42 PM)
Originally posted by IPG 2-3:
Always operate on the smallest set possible to remedy the error. This may mean applying the remedy to only part of a set defined by an instruction. For example, if a player resolves Collected Company, picks up three cards with one hand and then four cards with the other, the last drawn set of four cards should be used for the remedy, instead of the full set of seven cards.
Edited Bernie Hoelschen (Feb. 8, 2017 10:07:18 PM)
this can't be Hidden Card Error because the root cause was a dexterity error, so this is Looking at Extra Cards. It also cannot be HCE, as Arborea clearly intended to draw one card, and accidentally drew two cards, which is explicitly excluded from that infraction.Can't we apply this reasoning for almost any HCE situation?I If I cast Stirings, grab top 3 then grap another top 3 because of card “sticking” I could also say that my intention was to get only 2.
The cards themselves must be part of a distinct set intended by the player.In original situation our player want to create distinct set of 1 card but by mistake that set contains 2 card.
This infraction does not apply to simple dexterity errors, such as when a card being pulled off the library sticks to another card and is seen or knocked off the libraryFor me “sticks to another card and is seen” apply to situations, when while drawing 1 card top card of library “flips” for a second enough for me to notice what that card is but stays on top. If I drew that card, then I created set of cards with excess cards.
Originally posted by Bartłomiej Wieszok:No, you can't apply that reasoning to almost any situation.
Can't we apply this reasoning for almost any HCE situation?I If I cast Stirings, grab top 3 then grap another top 3 because of card “sticking” I could also say that my intention was to get only 2.
Originally posted by Michiel Van den Bussche:
So when I am called over to the table, if the player says he drew a card too many because they stick together, its L@EC. If he does not its HCE?
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