Originally posted by Michel Degenhardt:
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.
However, my personal experience playing magic tells me that this is a strange belief for NAP to have. Generally speaking, I would expect my opponent to want to kill both creatures in such a situation. Therefore, I would like to talk to NAP away from the table, to discover what NAP believed AP wanted to do, and why NAP believed that.
It is very well possible that NAP explains to me why AP wanted to kill just the 3/3, in which case there was no infraction.
It is also possible that NAP tells me that AP likely didn't know about the choice of damage resolution, so NAP assumed the choice was the one that was most advantageous to NAP. In this situation, I will educate NAP that NAP doesn't get to make that decision. At the very least, confirmation from AP is needed in such a situation. (Aside: the reason for this is that otherwise, NAP can do whatever they want whenever there is no explicit communication. Which requires AP to either always explicitly communicate, or to be constantly vigilant that NAP is assuming the obvious choices, both of which make playing Magic far more burdensome then it should be)
The final possibility is that NAP tells me that NAP believed AP wanted to kill both creatures. If NAP holds this belief, then “kill both” was both implicit and obvious by definition (after all, that's how NAP understood the situation).
I feel like I'm repeating myself on this point though. I assume that the point of difference between us is the following paragraph: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…
It seems to me that this is derived info of a past game state, though. By the time we're intervening, the 4/4 has died, and the choice has been made (or, more accurately, my first question in the intervention would be “AP, could you tell me what creatures died last combat?”, which locks AP into an explicit choice). Besides, don't we always risk revealing derived information when we intervene?
Edited Jason Riendeau (Aug. 14, 2017 12:07:01 PM)
Originally posted by Jason Riendeau:Note that the OP specifies that AP passed the turn. If we step in at that point, it is clear that we aren't waiting for NAP to bin the 1/1 anymore.
That's a great question - where are we if you intervene as soon as you see the 1/1 stay on the table and the other two hit the yard? AP can go “obviously, we're waiting on NAP to bin the 1/1”, and can take advantage of the new information they may have gained to change their mind about both their decision and where we are in the game.
As far as revealing derived info, stepping in generally does, but that's an inescapable end. If AP has Glorious Anthem, attacks with a Grizzly Bear, NAP blocks with a Grizzly Bear, and both players put their Bear into the grave, we should step in. This is clearly an illegal action.
Originally posted by Michel Degenhardt:I thought they already were. Isn't this the whole point of FtMGS?
If simply missing that your opponent didn't do something implies agreement, you require players to be hyper vigilant, because all of a sudden a player becomes responsible for the opponents actions.
Originally posted by IPG General Philosophy:
If the players are playing in a way that is clear to both players, but might cause confusion to an external observer, judges are encouraged to request that the players make the situation clear, but not assess an infraction or issue any penalty.