Originally posted by IPG 2.1:
Triggered abilities that do nothing except create one or more copies of a spell or ability (such as storm or cipher) automatically resolve, but awareness of the resulting objects must be demonstrated using the same requirements as described above (even though the objects may not be triggered abilities).
…
If the triggered ability specifies a default action associated with a choice made by the controller (usually “If you don't …” or “… unless”), resolve it choosing the default option.
CR 702.39a
Storm is a triggered ability that functions on the stack. “Storm” means “When you cast this spell, put a copy of it onto the stack for each other spell that was cast before it this turn. If the spell has any targets, you may choose new targets for any of the copies.”
Edited Joshua Feingold (Feb. 4, 2014 09:27:24 AM)
Edited Evan Cherry (Feb. 4, 2014 02:44:28 PM)
Originally posted by Federico Donner:
Philosophy behind missed trigger policy is that we assume players remembered their triggers unless they demonstrate they forgot. We could argue for days about the exact point in which we expect players to demonstrate they forgot (and I'd love to, btw) but I think it's pretty hard to defend that in this case Fusterstorm players forgot his/her trigger. As soon as the trigger mattered he/she remembered, that's perfectly aligned with policy for a player NOT missing his triggers.
If his/her opponent argues I love to ask them “do you really think he forgot the trigger?” It's pretty hard to argue honestly that it was a missed trigger when they are really rules lawyering their way out of the situation.
Originally posted by Federico Donner:
If his/her opponent argues I love to ask them “do you really think he forgot the trigger?” It's pretty hard to argue honestly that it was a missed trigger when they are really rules lawyering their way out of the situation.
Originally posted by Gareth Tanner:
Actually we have a list in the IPG stating when a trigger is missed. What is being discussed is does the not changing the target of a storm copy mean that you don't need to declare the target of that copy when it's created.
Originally posted by Brian Schenck:
I really don't see anything in that list which applies to this situation, rendering the trigger missed.
The player seems perfectly aware of it, there's nothing here that the opponent needed to know about the trigger in order to respond to it properly, and the “effect” of that trigger is being communicated at the appropriate time. Even if we presume that the storm trigger resolved automatically just after Flusterstorm was cast, the only legal target for it was Show and Tell. Changing the target of the copy is moot.
Originally posted by Gareth Tanner:
The trigger has resolved straight away due to the section of policy Mark quoted earlier, at which point we apply the same rules to that copy of the spell as we do to a trigger to determine if it is missed.
Originally posted by Brian Schenck:
Even if we presume that the storm trigger resolved automatically just after Flusterstorm was cast, the only legal target for it was Show and Tell. Changing the target of the copy is moot.
Edited Philip Ockelmann (Feb. 4, 2014 11:18:10 AM)
Originally posted by Philip Körte:
I might've just completely misread Flusterstorm, but its stormcopies can actually target the original Flusterstorm, so S&T is not the only legal target if the storm trigger resolved immediately (before FoWs are cast and the original is eventually countered), right?
Originally posted by Brian Schenck:
What section of policy of that applies here? Specifically, what bullet actually applies by which the player “needs to demonstrate awareness” of the trigger in order for it not to be missed?
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