Originally posted by Samuel Tremblay:
That's a very good idea. But can you define what's illegal? You can clearly not redirect counter spells to Spellskite, but what about a player that forgets his Dark Confidant trigger? What if he forgets to gain life with a life link creature?
What's the difference between illegal action and illegal board state? Should I be intervening in both?
Missed triggers are not illegal per se. If you think the player missed a generally detrimental trigger (like losing 1 life to Torment's Herald) or intentionally missed a trigger, you would step in. For the most part, you should not step in to point out missed triggers unless you're comfortable that they're detrimental and should encourage other players to do the same. Even better, ask them to ask you first.
Not gaining life with a lifelink creature is not a trigger. That's a game rule, and they have to do it. If they forget, step in when they try to take another action that clearly shows they forgot it and remind them that they have to gain the life. Hopefully you caught it before a backup is really difficult. If so, do nothing!
Illegal actions are something that may or may not result in an illegal board state. A player
Spellskites a
Counterspell. The counterspell goes to the graveyard. You walk up. This is not an illegal board state- spellskite is a permanent, counterspell is an instant in the graveyard. You can put 2 and 2 together and figure out that something illegal happened and ask about it.
An illegal gamestate is an ongoing violation of the game rules. Think
Unflinching Courage on a
Stormbreath Dragon. It was an illegal action to target the dragon with the courage due to protection from white. Protection from white should also remove any white enchantments from the dragon during state-based actions, so this is a currently illegal gamestate. If you can't back up to when the UC was cast, perform necessary state-based actions to clean up the game and continue, reminding them to be more careful.
For a real brainteaser, you see a
Stormbreath Dragon exiled with
Detention Sphere. You know that an illegal action happened to target the stormbreath dragon, but what if it's too late to backup? Even though they're “linked”, there's nothing wrong about a dragon in exile, and the d-sphere is perfectly legal in play. Here, an illegal action has resulted in a weird but legal game state.
The take-home is that you should ask questions concerning illegal actions or illegal game states. You can fix illegal actions by backing up if it's not too complicated and disruptive to the game. If you can't, the next step is to fix illegal board states- you have to do this. After that, educate them why what they did was illegal.