Originally posted by Adam Zakreski:
If the sentence has “if” and a match result, it's almost always bribery.
Addendum (because the first part of this sentence was left out): If the sentence is of the form “<compensation> if <match result>” and is a single clause of this form, it is almost always bribery. We allow “if <match result>” phrases under certain circumstances, I believe (for example in the case of a prize pool of, say, 15 packs, split 10-5 between the 2 players, we would allow the statement “if you win, you'll get 8 and I'll get 7, if I win I'll get 8 and you'll get 7”).
Edited Lyle Waldman (July 9, 2013 01:48:32 PM)