Originally posted by Martin Koehler:
My personal opinions to the examples:
1: DEC
2: I would see this as DEC, but downgrade to a warning. The spell was known to all players and can be returned to the correct zone with minimal disruption. (Corner Case: Morph Spell :D)
3: DEC, Downgrade to Warning. I think this a classic example for the downgrade, because the card was known to all players and can be returned to the correct zone.
4+5: DEC in my opinion.
6: GRV - because he hasn't put a extra card in his hand, so DEC doesn't apply.
7: DEC with downgrade
8: DEC.
For me, “fail to follow the instructions of a spell” is not a GRV. Is a violation of the Gamerules and a Game Play Error. Which concrete Game Play Error depends how the player screwed up. And if it is screwing up by putting a card in his hand that doesn't belong there it is DEC.
A player illegally puts one or more cards into his or her hand and, at the moment before he or she began the instruction or action that put a card into his or her hand, no other Game Play Error or Communication Policy Violation had been committed, and the error was not the result of resolving objects on the stack in an incorrect order.We don't look if another GPE or CPV was committed (again, this is usually the case). We look if another GPE or CPV was committed before the card was drawn. If at this point, everything was legal, it's a GPE-DEC.
Originally posted by Emilien Wild:
To extrapolate a little more, most Game Play Error - Drawing Extra Cards infractions are due to people not following game rules properly. People don't just put extra cards in their hand for no reason, they often misplay a card or an ability. So there is often something else involved in the infraction.
Keep in mind that Game Play Error - Game Rules Violation is the “catch-all” infraction for Game Play Errors that doesn't fall into any other category. I understand that some judges, advert to giving Game Losses, try to first push for GPE-GRV instead, but that's actually the opposite: we first try to see it the infraction fits GPE-DEC, and if not (and none if the other infractions), we move to GPE-GRV, its penalty and its fix.
Also, the documents for GPE-DEC says:A player illegally puts one or more cards into his or her hand and, at the moment before he or she began the instruction or action that put a card into his or her hand, no other Game Play Error or Communication Policy Violation had been committed, and the error was not the result of resolving objects on the stack in an incorrect order.We don't look if another GPE or CPV was committed (again, this is usually the case). We look if another GPE or CPV was committed before the card was drawn. If at this point, everything was legal, it's a GPE-DEC.
Edited Christian Genz (May 18, 2013 04:45:16 PM)
Originally posted by Haitao Jia:
It's quite clear for putting a card into the hand, but how about not to discard a card? This cause the player having one more card? Putting that card into his hand is legal, and he knows exactly why he has one more card.
- If a player forgot to discard or return cards from their hand to another zone, that player does so
Edited Toby Hazes (May 18, 2013 07:09:27 PM)
Originally posted by Toby Hazes:Haitao Jia
It's quite clear for putting a card into the hand, but how about not to discard a card? This cause the player having one more card? Putting that card into his hand is legal, and he knows exactly why he has one more card.
That's just GRV. See the Brainstorm example in that category. It's also one of the exceptions that always should be fixed, even if it's partial:
- If a player forgot to discard or return cards from their hand to another zone, that player does so
Originally posted by Tom Wyliehart:
While you would normally put cards back on top of the library, since that clearly affects the targeting decision, I would shuffle the cards in, keeping in mind any known portions of the deck.
IPG
These procedures do not, and should not, take into account the game being played, the current situation that the game is in, or who will benefit strategically from the procedure associated with the penalty. While it is tempting to try to “fix” game situations, the danger of missing a subtle detail or showing favoritism to a player (even unintentionally) makes it a bad idea.
Edited Casey Brefka (May 21, 2013 02:24:08 AM)
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