Edited Joe Klopchic (June 6, 2018 06:21:38 PM)
Originally posted by IPG 3.4:
Penalties for decklist errors discovered during a deck check are issued immediately.
Other decklist penalties are issued at the start of the next round to minimize the disruption to the match currently being played and provide consistency in case some players have finished playing their match before the penalty can be administered.
Edited Bernie Hoelschen (June 7, 2018 01:41:41 PM)
Originally posted by Rob Marti:
Bernie - the card hasn't been revealed in either game - it is in A's hand and B just drew it.
I'd go with a decklist problem - the team gets to pick which decklist is incorrect and we fix it. We'll assess the penalty at the start of the next round as normal.
Originally posted by Chris Wendelboe:
How are you proposing we handle this round then? What happens to the game that is currently going on?
My take on this is that we pause the match and pull this team aside, confirm that they understand the rules of unified standard (perhaps by educating them), and proceed to determine which list is incorrect (or lists, as if they had this wrong they might have other things wrong). Any lists that aren't being modified are fine to continue playing, but we have to fix at least a single decklist.
Originally posted by Rob Marti:
Bernie - the card hasn't been revealed in either game - it is in A's hand and B just drew it.
I'd go with a decklist problem - the team gets to pick which decklist is incorrect and we fix it. We'll assess the penalty at the start of the next round as normal.
Originally posted by Francesco Scialpi:
Suppose you notice a player having a banned card in their hand.Would you let the game progress and finish before you intervene?
Originally posted by Joe Klopchic:
Welcome back to the Knowledge Pool!
This week we have a Gold scenario. Everyone is welcome to join in the discussion immediately. Enjoy!
Adica, Baptiste and Cal are playing in a Team Unified Standard tournament. You're watching their matches and see Baptiste draw a Broken Bond, a card which Adica already has in her hand.
What do you do?
Edited Francesco Scialpi (June 8, 2018 09:44:57 AM)
Originally posted by Francesco Scialpi:
2) When should we assess the penalty? Immediately, or at beginning of next round?
Originally posted by Francesco Scialpi:
1) Who should receive the penalty?
Originally posted by Logan Anbinder:
In the Mid-Atlantic Slack discussion about this scenario, Ben Harris also pointed out that this rule has a good analogue in the normal DLP remedy– we usually remove cards starting from the bottom of a player's list, so if we look at the lists A/B/C as one “meta-list,” we remove the cards from B first (i.e, we allow the cards in A).
Edited Bernie Hoelschen (June 8, 2018 02:46:05 PM)
Originally posted by IPG:
Alter the decklist to match the deck the player is actually playing. If the deck/sideboard and
decklist both violate a maximum cards restriction (usually too many cards in a sideboard or more
than four of a card), remove cards starting from the bottom of the appropriate section of the list
or lists.
Originally posted by Logan Anbinder:
I would suggest we follow a rule that we allocate cards to players' decklists in A/B/C order. Thus, the Broken Bonds in Adica's list are legal but the ones in Baptiste's are not.
In the Mid-Atlantic Slack discussion about this scenario, Ben Harris also pointed out that this rule has a good analogue in the normal DLP remedy– we usually remove cards starting from the bottom of a player's list, so if we look at the lists A/B/C as one “meta-list,” we remove the cards from B first (i.e, we allow the cards in A)
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