There don't seem to be many responses this week, so I am going to chime in a bit earlier on Friday than I might otherwise. This is a bit of a frustrating situation in that I believe there is an obvious, non-disruptive, and all around satisfactory solution to this issue (just swap the Gideon cards) that would work great at Kitchen Table REL but has no support at Comp REL.
There are a bunch of thought exercises we could go through to determine how to fit this situation into an established infraction (I'll go into some of those below), but I think the fact that it is difficult to nail down exactly what infraction occurred—especially given the somewhat obvious, albeit unsupported fix—should indicate that policy is lacking applicable philosophical guidance for this scenario. In light of this, in the very limited circumstances of this scenario, as head judge, I would be inclined to authorize a deviation from written policy. I would authorize the partial fix of putting Gideon, Ally of Zendikar onto the battlefield and putting Gideon of the Trials back into AP's hand. I would explain to both players that this fix falls outside the bounds of written policy, explain my prerogative as head judge to deviate from the written policy, issue no penalties, remind both players to be more observant in the future, and allow the game to proceed from Nick's draw step.
I think that there are two key pieces of information to consider here: (1) both players had a shared perception of reality: AP cast Gideon, Ally of Zendikar, activated its ability to make a token, and passed the turn; and (2) since AP has the correct card in hand, there is an obvious (though unsupported) means of making metaphysical reality match the players' perception of reality. The deviation essentially accomplishes the same result as a backup while avoiding any potential disruption caused by rewinding through a draw step.
Below, I will discuss why I don't think this situation fits well into established infractions.
GRVPerhaps the knee jerk reaction is to say that a GRV must have occurred somewhere. For this to be the case, it would mean that AP cast Gideon of the Trials and then activated an ability that it doesn't have. (If we wanted to be supremely pedantic, then the first GRV was actually that AP floated 4 mana, cast a 3 CMC spell, and then passed priority without declaring the floating mana. Let's not go there.)
Now the question becomes: Did AP really cast Gideon of the Trials? AP floated requisite mana and announced Gideon, Ally of Zendikar. He then (unintentionally) revealed a card with the name Gideon of the Trials. Does that really mean Gideon of the Trials was cast? And affirmative answer to this question seems quite unsatisfactory in that it ostensibly puts more weight on the relatively thoughtless action of plopping a card on the table than it does on the more intentional actions of tapping mana and communicating with the opponent. Had either player called out the mistake at this point, then the obvious solution seems to be “Oops, I revealed the wrong card; here's the correct card from my hand.” The fact that both players then also proceeded with the rest of the turn under the shared understanding that the card on the table was in fact Gideon, Ally of Zendikar makes the proposition that AP really unintentionally cast a different spell seem unreasonable.
In this regard, I also think the fact that the unintentionally revealed card was Gideon of the Trials is a bit of a red herring. If you believe that AP cast Gideon of the Trials, then I would ask you to reimagine this scenario, except the revealed card was Glory Seeker, not Gideon of the Trials. In that case, would you also believe that AP actually cast Glory Seeker? So in this situation, did AP really violate a game rule or did he “simply put down the wrong card”? The answer seems pretty clearly to be the latter.
For these reasons, I don't believe this situation fits cleanly into a GRV. However, if we were determined to fit this situation into a GRV, then the only obvious infraction is a GRV for creating a token with Gideon of the Trials. In this case, policy would have use rewind only to the point of activating the ability. So we are saying (despite all evidence to the contrary) that AP really cast Gideon of the Trials, not Ally of Zendikar, and the game will proceed from APs main phase. This rewind is is strictly in line with the letter of the law, and yet it seems to be the least intuitive and most disruptive option available. All in all, this is just a bad choice.
CPV“See, the thing about CPV is that it's never really CPV….” But, jokes aside, the next possible infraction is a CPV for misidentifying the name of a public object. I think we are back to asking ourselves whether the card in play is really Gideon of the Trials or if AP cast Gideon, Ally of Zendikar and “simply put down the wrong card.” I think we have pretty well established the arguments against this stance. I think calling this situation a CPV would do more to pay lip service to the IPG than it would to actually address the problem. Let's not call it something it really isn't just so we have a defined infraction to point to. Furthermore, given that NAP did not take any actions based on the supposedly incorrect information furnished by his opponent, policy would provide no grounds for backing up at all. We'd just leave Abel with a Gideon of the Trials and a Knight token. Again, this could fit strictly within the IPG, but we're stretching to reach this Infraction, and other available solutions seem much more satisfactory and less disruptive.
As an important final note: Ultimately whether the remedies outlined in policy “feel” right is irrelevant to determining what infraction has occurred. The real issue, as I have explained, is that in the particular facts of this scenario, either of these infractions presupposes that Abel “really did” cast Gideon of the Trials. I don't believe that to be the case, and therefore, I don't believe either of these infractions can apply.
Edited Edward Bryn Pitt (Sept. 22, 2017 12:41:33 PM)