Hello,
Last weekend I got this situation at the MCQ I was judging:
This is the start of the match, Anton drew the first four cards of their opening hand from the top of their Library and laid them face down in front of them. They then proceded to draw the remaining three card but accidentally drew four cards instead and saw them before realizing their error.
At the moment I took the call, the last cards drawn were still in their hand and the first 4 cards drawn were still face down on their playmat. Investigation concluded that the extra card draw was not intentional. Also confirmed that both sets of cards drawn never touched each other.
This is a Mulligan Procedure Error and the fix is to let Anton choose between:
-Option1: Reveal their (whole) hand and opponent chooses an amount of cards
Option 2: Mulligan again.
However, in this case, since the first four cards of the opening hand were clearly identified (laid down on their playmat) and the extra card being on the second set (held in their hand) It could have been logical to, had Anton chosen Option 1, to apply the fix only on the set of the last 4 cards drawn instead or the whole hand, based on the philosophy of HCE to operate that kind of fix on the smallest set possible.
Going that way would be a deviation from Policy, since :
A. The remedy specifically stated to reveal their hand, which implies revealing the whole hand.
B. The philosophy to operate the “thoughtseize fix” on the smallest set possible is stated in the philosophy section of HCE, but not MPE.
Is there a reason why the “Operate on smallest set possible” philosophy of HCE is not applied on MPE cases where a relatively similar remedy can be applied ?
Is such a deviation reasonable for this situation ?
Thanks !
Edit: fixed a typo
Edited David Lachance-Poitras (June 19, 2019 03:07:11 PM)