Edited Scott Marshall (Sept. 5, 2017 11:44:30 AM)
Originally posted by IPG 3.7:The Cerodon's ability is part of Oracle text, which is implied by the card, and is considered Derived info:
Players may not represent derived or free information incorrectly.
Originally posted by MTR 4.1:If the Cerodon were also attacking - as I first read it - this could be a simple GRV, and no harm done.
Game Rules, Tournament Policy, Oracle content and any other official information pertaining to the current tournament. Cards are considered to have their Oracle text printed on them.
Originally posted by IPG:Alie acted on his own error, Noel acted on his opponent's error.
A backup may be considered in cases where a player has clearly acted upon incorrect information provided to him or her by his or her opponent. The backup should be to the point of the action, not the erroneous communication.
Edited Scott Marshall (Sept. 6, 2017 07:45:41 AM)
Originally posted by IPG:
Refer to section 4.1 of the Magic Tournament Rules for a full explanation of the policy. It can be summarized as:
Players must answer all questions asked of them by a judge completely and honestly, regardless of the type of information requested. Players may request to do so away from the match.
Players may not represent derived or free information incorrectly.
Players must answer completely and honestly any specific questions pertaining to free information.
Originally posted by Gediminas Usevičius:
Alie casts Gilded Cerodon and says your ‘Can’t block' while tapping Neon's Hollow One.
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
nothing happened that couldn't have happened - i.e., it's almost the same philosophy as Out of Order Sequencing
Originally posted by Jake Eakle:
I'm confused about two things:Originally posted by Gediminas Usevičius:
Alie casts Gilded Cerodon and says your ‘Can’t block' while tapping Neon's Hollow One.
Does “tapping” here mean “touching with a finger” rather than “turning sideways”? And should “your ‘Can’t block'” read “'your creature can't block'”?Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
nothing happened that couldn't have happened - i.e., it's almost the same philosophy as Out of Order Sequencing
As far as I can tell from reading the scenario, Gilded Cerodon was just cast and cannot attack, so it would not be possible to resolve its trigger this turn. Am I missing something?
Originally posted by IPG 3.7:The Cerodon's ability is part of Oracle text, which is implied by the card, and is considered Derived info:
Players may not represent derived or free information incorrectly.
Originally posted by MTR 4.1:If the Cerodon were also attacking - as I first read it - this could be a simple GRV, and no harm done.
Game Rules, Tournament Policy, Oracle content and any other official information pertaining to the current tournament. Cards are considered to have their Oracle text printed on them.
Originally posted by IPG:Alie acted on his own error, Noel acted on his opponent's error.
A backup may be considered in cases where a player has clearly acted upon incorrect information provided to him or her by his or her opponent. The backup should be to the point of the action, not the erroneous communication.
Edited Scott Marshall (Sept. 6, 2017 07:45:41 AM)
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
The Cerodon's ability is part of Oracle text, which is implied by the card, and is considered Derived info:
Originally posted by Isaac King:
By that logic, can't pretty much any error be framed as a CPV? “Judge, I accidentally put my creature that was Path to Exiled into the graveyard- Well, the text of Path to Exile is derived info, so that's a CPV.”
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
uhhh… No.
Ariel communicated and incorrectly represented derived info.
Originally posted by Francesco Scialpi:
What if AP casts Path to Exile and tells her opponent “please put that creature in your graveyard”?
Would this be PCV?
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
uhhh… No.
Ariel communicated and incorrectly represented derived info.
Originally posted by Isaac King:No, as in the first scenario, you claim something that isn't true (the creature not being able to block) while in your example you are targetting an illegal target which is a GRV.
Ok, I chose a bad analogy. Let me try again- AP casts Doom Blade on a creature with protection from black. NAP puts the card into the graveyard. Is this CPV? In my eyes, this is pretty much the same situation as the original question- pointing at a creature and saying “that can't block” is choosing a target for the ability, which he wasn't supposed to do.
Edited Olivier Wattel (Sept. 7, 2017 10:10:57 AM)
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