IPG Section 2.1: “Once any of the above obligations has been fulfilled, or the trigger has been otherwise acknowledged, further problems are treated as a Game Play Error — Game Rule Violation.”
A player allows another player in the game to commit a Game Play Error involving an effect or action that he or she does not control, and has not pointed it out immediately.Under this policy, Naomi would only receive a FtMGS infraction if she allowed Andy to commit a GPE involving an effect or action he doesn't control. One of the peculiarities with these new M14 abilities, is that Andy controlled the effect that should have returned Colossal Whale to play, so according to the literal wording of the IPG, Naomi did not commit an FtMGS even though it was her permanent that should have returned. I think most judges would give her one anyway, but (maybe due to ambiguous working in IPG 2.6) that doesn't seem appropriate.
If the triggered ability creates an effect whose duration has already expired or the ability was missed prior to the current phase in the previous player's turn, instruct the players to continue playing.The duration of this ability is up… so…. do we return the cub? No? I don't think so. Ultimately, I decided that since I ruled its a GRV, I have to remedy for a GRV. GRV's must be either backed up completely, or not at all, with a few exceptions. The “object changing zones” clause would apply as an exception:
If an object changing zones is put into the wrong zone, the identity of the object was known to all players, and it is within a turn of the error, put the object in the correct zone.but it clearly states that it only applies if the ruling was given within a turn of the error, so I would rule that the cub stays exiled.
In a situation where the effect that caused the infraction is controlled by one player, but the illegal action is taken by another player, both receive a Game Play Error – Game Rule Violation. For example, if a player casts Path to Exile on an opponent’s creature and the opponent puts the creature into the graveyard, both players receive a Game Play Error — Game Rule Violation infraction.Does this mean that Naomi would receive a GPE-GRV as well, since it was her permanent?
Edited Alex Moore (July 18, 2013 10:11:27 PM)
Edited Scott Marshall (July 18, 2013 11:20:09 PM)
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
Alex, you are correct that returning the Bear Cub is not covered by the Missed Trigger section of the IPG, and that it's really an example of “further problems are treated as (GPE-GRV)”.
As for GPE-GRV vs. FtMGS for Naomi - yes. (heh)
I'd go with Failure to Maintain Game State - Andy forgot to return the Bear Cub (hmmm… make sure there's nothing fishy there), and Naomi allowed that to happen. The illegal action - leaving the Bear Cub in the Exile zone - is Andy's, not Naomi's, so your other citation doesn't apply. That's for things like Path to Exile - oh, wait, that's exactly what the IPG says! :)
Now, for the good news: the most common physical action re: Colossal Whale's exile ability is just to slide the creature card under the Whale. When the Whale leaves the battlefield - presto! there's the exiled cards, ready to return! That's how most people will play it, anyway. And those who don't, just need to pay close attention. (And that never hurts, anyway.)
Edited Alex Moore (July 19, 2013 12:29:08 AM)
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
It will also confuse some players when someone does the trick of bouncing Fiend Hunter before it's first trigger resolves, thus exiling the target forever. And it will confuse them even more when they try the same trick with Banisher Priest, only to learn that doesn't work…
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:>
It will also confuse some players when someone does the trick of bouncing Fiend Hunter before it's first trigger resolves, thus exiling the target forever. And it will confuse them even more when they try the same trick with Banisher Priest, only to learn that doesn't work…
Originally posted by Matthew Johnson:
On Thu Jul 18 22:32, Gareth Tanner wrote:
>Scott Marshall>
It will also confuse some players when someone does the trick of bouncing Fiend Hunter before it's first trigger resolves, thus exiling the target forever. And it will confuse them even more when they try the same trick with Banisher Priest, only to learn that doesn't work…
> I thought the rules were updated (610.3a) so that effects like Fiend Hunter and Oblivion Ring will work in the same way Banisher Priest…
They did not errata the old cards. Hunter and Ring will still behave as they always have with a pair of triggers.
Matt
Edited Gareth Tanner (July 19, 2013 12:46:25 AM)
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
Gareth, 610.3a is for things like - oddly enough - Colossal Whale, and doesn't apply to cards like Fiend Hunter.
Colossal Whale has a one-shot effect with an “until” duration - exactly what's described in 610.3. Fiend Hunter still has two triggers. If you check Gatherer, you'll see the one ruling listed for Fiend Hunter - and it's still correct.
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