Actually, I would consider this to be a GPE-GRV for player A(and no TE-CPV), since player A removed Ephara from combat(or otherwise did not have it deal combat damage), and removing a creature from combat is not covered by another
GPE.
Even though player A made a comment about Ephara that is not true (saying it stops being a creature), the game state itself is corrupted and actually reflects this fact, therefor player A did not represent free/derived information incorrectly, the game state simply happens to be incorrect, similarly to how mistakenly putting a creature into your graveyard does not represent free information incorrectly, even if you confirm it is now in the graveyard.
Overall, I would issue a Warning for GPE-GRV to player A, and a Warning for GPE-FtMGS to player B(unless he intentionally ignored the error), since he did not point out A's error, and and it involves an effect/action he does not control.
As a remedy, I would either back the situation up completely or perform no partial fix.
A backup seems reasonably easy to perform, and the point you'd back up to would be the point immediately before the error occured, just before
Deputy of Acquittals's trigger returns
Daring Skyjek to its owner's hand.
If no rewind is made, the game continues, with no partial fix being made. No damage was dealt by Ephara, and no life was lost as a result.
Best regards,
Sebastian Stückl :)
PS: Can we please give the players real names? “A” and “B” is a bit awkward.
If possible, “A~” should be the active player, “N~” the non-active player
Edited Sebastian Stückl (Feb. 15, 2014 03:29:38 PM)