Originally posted by Scott Marshall:Originally posted by Dominik Chłobowski:
a player should never make assumptions regarding the game state
Originally posted by Michel Degenhardt:
I have. That post clearly explains why we don't intervene to prevent a rules violation from occuring. We only intervene if we believe a rules violation occurred in the past.
In this case, the 1/1 didn't die, and then AP passed the turn. As the potential rules violation already occurred, we're free to intervene to make sure that the gamestate is correct.
Originally posted by Dominik Chłobowski:Yeah, that's bizarre - I used the “Quote” link after highlighting Michel's words about assumptions, but somehow it was attributed to you?!? Weird.
I'm afraid that wasn't my quote, fwiw.
Originally posted by Dominik Chłobowski:The only reason you believe that there has been a likely infraction is strategic. If you step in to clarify what happened, you highlight the fact that AP had another, likely superior, line of play.
I don't think it's harmful to step in to clarify if the 1/1 died if you think there was a likely infraction
Originally posted by Michel Degenhardt:
I'm having a difficult time seeing “are you aware that the rules require you to distribute the damage” as a strategic choice.
MTR:
A player should have an advantage due to better understanding of the options provided by the rules of the game,
greater awareness of the interactions in the current game state, and superior tactical planning.
Originally posted by Isaac King:If AP is unaware of the fact that AP gets to decide how to distribute the damage, then effectively NAP has made the choice. Doesn't that mean that inherently a rule has been broken?
Players are only required to know the rules insofar as they need to in order to play legally. If a player has a misunderstanding of the rules that isn't causing an illegal action to take place, we don't step in to inform them. In fact this would be Outside Assistance if a spectator did. (You're welcome to educate them after the match.)
Edited Michel Degenhardt (Aug. 14, 2017 03:55:51 AM)
Originally posted by Michel Degenhardt:
I've seen several questions asking if I would step in given a different but similar scenario. The answer in those cases depends on if I believe NAP might be intentionally ignoring the implied damage distribution. To understand the differences, it's good to look at why I want to step in in this particular case. This will also help as a summary of my understanding thus far.
Why I want to intervene
The reason I want to intervene is one particular scenario. If NAP believes that it is obvious that AP wants to kill both creatures, but decides to use the lack of explicit communication to only bin the 3/3 in the hope that AP won't notice, I feel NAP is cheating. Just as NAP can't ignore an explicit “kill both” from AP, NAP also can't ignore an implicit “kill both”. I would like to investigate what NAP believes is happening, as I'm unlikely to discover NAP's beliefs by just observing.
This same risk exists in the scenario Yurick proposed, so I would be inclined intervene there. It doesn't exist in the scenario I received through the mail, so in that scenario, I wouldn't intervene. I am aware that I'm using my strategic judgement of the situation in deciding whether or not that risk exists.
Why others say I shouldn't intervene
The argument against intervening seems to be that by doing so, I risk revealing strategic information to AP. From what has been said thus far, it is my understanding that the strategic information that we risk revealing is the rules knowledge that AP decides how to distribute the damage.
What I'm still unsure about
I was unsure how revealing that rules knowledge was revealing strategic information. Isaac's reply partially addresses that question:Originally posted by Isaac King:If AP is unaware of the fact that AP gets to decide how to distribute the damage, then effectively NAP has made the choice. Doesn't that mean that inherently a rule has been broken?
Players are only required to know the rules insofar as they need to in order to play legally. If a player has a misunderstanding of the rules that isn't causing an illegal action to take place, we don't step in to inform them. In fact this would be Outside Assistance if a spectator did. (You're welcome to educate them after the match.)
Originally posted by Jason Riendeau:
The implied damage distribution in the proposed scenario is “4 damage to a 3/3”, which is a legal play. The first time that AP mentions how they are distributing damage is a turn later going “why isn't that dead?”
There's a damage assignment order, but that's ordering which creature gets damage, not how much damage is being dealt.
Originally posted by Jason Riendeau:NAP puts just the 3/3 in the graveyard, without saying anything. That is perfectly fine, if NAP believes that to be the choice that AP is communicating.
That's the trap - “obvious”. There's no mention about an explicit “kill both” in the presented scenario. What in this scenario or the rules makes the “kill both” implicit and obvious?
As far as NAP's affirmative obligations in combat, they need to make sure that attackers are legal, their own blocks are legal, there's a damage assignment order (if it will matter), combat damage is legally assigned, and that the results are correctly handled, such as their life total going down or their creatures dying.
In this scenario, the attacks and blocks are legal (no mention of either being illegal was given), there's a damage assignment order (they asked when there wasn't one), there's a legal combat damage assignment (all of it to first blocker is legal), and the results are correctly handled (they put their dead creature in the graveyard).
Originally posted by Jason Riendeau:If NAP had asked “so your creature and my 3/3 die?” and AP had confirmed, I would agree with you. However, the situation we're discussing is one where NAP puts his 3/3 into the graveyard without saying anything. AP didn't do anything whatsoever to indicate any choice, as evidenced by the fact that it's easy to imagine AP going “why isn't that dead?”. NAP putting 1 card in the graveyard is not “suggesting a choice”.
NAP is proposing a damage assignment. AP is agreeing to it, so they are implicitly choosing that damage assignment. If NAP explicitly went “I get to choose how damage is assigned”, they are actively misrepresenting the rule, and that's a problem. Suggesting a choice isn't misrepresentation.
Originally posted by Jason Riendeau:This, for me, is the most relevant part of your post: an explanation of the information that we risk revealing by intervening, and therefore an explanation of why intervening may be a bad decision.
You also reveal that their creature is a 4/4 (derived info - relevant for Tarmogoyf), and that there's another strategic option available - they can also kill the 1/1. They may be aware of killing the 1/1 at the time, or they might not. Given that the first time that they mention killing the 1/1 was after the fact…