Edited Olivier Jansen (Oct. 29, 2014 09:52:57 AM)
Originally posted by David Wright:
I feel obligated to point out that we're playing Standard in this example, so the only possible target for the Mire that can cast Thoughtseize is a Basic Land— Swamp.
Originally posted by Bartłomiej Wieszok:You have described two situations where the error is visible. It is visibly illegal to cast a Thoughtsieze from a Plains without an Urborg in play. In this situation, N believes the Thoughtsieze is being cast off of a Swamp which A has shortcutted the fetching of. This would be legal (and appreciated in order to keep the pace of play up), but for the fact that there is no Swamp to find.
So I have question, what's the difference between that situation and casting and resolving Thoughtseize from Plains or uncracked fetch? The latter ones are simply GRV without upgrades, we could say, that they are just alike example A for GRV. For me then it would be GRV and Warning that would left us with question do we back it up.
David Wright“Mire, activate Mire, find and tap a Swamp” was the proposed shortcut, and it is not possible because there is no Swamp to find and tap. It is illegal to propose a shortcut that you are not able to legally execute.
Dan, what about the fetch is illegal? I may have missed that part. It seems to me that saying “Mire, activate Mire, fail to find” is a perfectly legal line of play. Isn't casting Thoughtseize without paying for it the first error that occurs?
Originally posted by Dan Collins:Good point. In light of that…
“Mire, activate Mire, find and tap a Swamp” was the proposed shortcut, and it is not possible because there is no Swamp to find and tap. It is illegal to propose a shortcut that you are not able to legally execute.
Violet Edgar
(Though it does bring up the question: If Astro had a Mountain is his library, would you allow him to find it with Mire's ability?)
Edited Darcy Alemany (Oct. 29, 2014 10:38:03 AM)
An error that an opponent can’t verify the legality of should have its penalty upgraded. These errors involve
misplaying hidden information, such as the morph ability or failing to reveal a card to prove that a choice made was
a legal one.
NAP has two legal options: to accept the shortcut, or to interrupt it at some point with a response. He doesn't have a response, so he must accept the shortcut.
All actions taken must be legal if they were executed in the correct order, and any opponent can ask the player to
do the actions in the correct sequence so that he or she can respond at the appropriate time (at which point players
will not be held to any still-pending actions).
This is a sort of “misplaying hidden information”. AP would have been fine if he hadn't tried to shortcut this illegally, but the fact that he has now attempted to resolve a spell that he can't possibly pay for is a clear GRV, and by rushing the Thoughtsieze out, he moved past the point where his opponent could verify that a legal land was put into play.This isn't a case of misplaying Hidden Information.
Hidden information refers to the faces of cards and other objects at which the rules of the game and format do not
allow you to look.
Originally posted by Matthew Turnbull:
I agree with others I would not back up in this situation, as resolving Thoughtseize has much potential to affect all subsequent decisions in the game, for both players.
Edited Clynn Wilkinson (Nov. 5, 2014 02:45:19 PM)