Originally posted by Alex Moore:
Unfortunately, while the argument could be made, I doubt very seriously that the controllers intent was “I resolve Boon Satyr, it goes to the graveyard.” We can infer due to the normal rules followed for illegal targets on resolution that the player incorrectly assumed the spell was countered and therefore did not resolve it. This is a GRV. The GRV was that he did not resolve the spell. Both players allowed a spell on the stack to just NOT resolve…
Originally posted by Nick Short:
Are you sure on that? It appears that they thought it went to the graveyard
because it was countered *on resolution*. So the opponent already had the
chance to respond when it was originally cast.
Lyle Waldman
If a spell “just does not resolve”, as you suggest, it should be exiled as per Time Stop (the only effect in Magic thus far that allows a spell to “just not resolve”, and as such the precedent-setter in this instance). Based on the fact that the Boon Satyr was not exiled, I would hesitate to agree with your ruling by intent here
Originally posted by IPG 2.5:
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.
Originally posted by Matt Farney:
I have seen responses that imply that the GRV partial fix exception should not apply here.IPG 2.5
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.
Is there any reason that we would treat a Stack->Graveyard mistake (should have been Stack->Battlefield) any different than Battlefield->Graveyard instead of Battlefield->Exile (the example in the IPG)?
-mf
Edited Toby Hazes (Oct. 28, 2013 07:08:42 AM)
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