So last night at my LGS I was playing against someone and I was running Mono Black Aggro. I was at 2 life game two and decided to Thoughtseize him to see if he has any wonky sb cards(cause who doesn't love free info). He looked at the pad and chuckled and scooped his cards up and says good game. Now technically since Thoughtseize doesn't lose me the game until it resolves, does that mean my opponent would lose since he scooped with it on the stack? I'm not trying to see if I can get free wins but it was a really interesting question that's been bugging me. It is already in game 2 where sideboarding would have already occurred.
'm an L2 judge and I very much agree that it is not a concession but incorrectly resolving Thoughtseize. That is a GRV and a Warning at Competitive REL. If the player that scooped up his cards actually believed that he won then I would give him the win. He knew that when the Thoughtseize resolved he would win, so he skipped to that point.
The difference is that you are required to reveal the morph to prove that the card you had in play face down actually was a morph. With Thoughtseize you do not need to reveal it to prove that you had cards in your hand. The part of the IPG that you are referencing is used for search effects like Idyllic Tutor where you need to prove that you actually got an Enchantment and or else Idyllic Tutor is straight up a Demonic Tutor for 2W.
The part from the IPG references failing to reveal a card to prove that a choice made was a legal one.
Nowhere in showing your hand from a Thoughtseize does it require you to reveal information to verify the legality of anything.
Since we can all agree that the player did not intend to concede and that he was clearly winning after the Thoughtseize resolving I would allow him to win but give a warning at Competitive and a stern talking to at Regular.
Edited Daniel Chew (Nov. 11, 2014 04:42:47 AM)
Originally posted by Daniel Chew:
He also made this point regarding the reason for this.The difference is that you are required to reveal the morph to prove that the card you had in play face down actually was a morph. With Thoughtseize you do not need to reveal it to prove that you had cards in your hand. The part of the IPG that you are referencing is used for search effects like Idyllic Tutor where you need to prove that you actually got an Enchantment and or else Idyllic Tutor is straight up a Demonic Tutor for 2W.
The part from the IPG references failing to reveal a card to prove that a choice made was a legal one.
Nowhere in showing your hand from a Thoughtseize does it require you to reveal information to verify the legality of anything.
Since we can all agree that the player did not intend to concede and that he was clearly winning after the Thoughtseize resolving I would allow him to win but give a warning at Competitive and a stern talking to at Regular.
Any thoughts?
Mitja Bosnic
I think this situation is philosophically similar to this one: AP is attacking for lethal, NAP shows him a Lightning Bolt (AP is at 3). AP shrugs and NAP scoops up his permanents, at which point AP calls the judge and asks whether this means NAP has conceded the match. It clearly does not, as that would encourage a lot of rules-lawyering in the sense of “waiting to see who phisically picks up their cards first”. The natural situation in both cases is clear and tricking your opponent (or yourself, for that matter) into conceding due to a nitpick should not be encouraged.
Edited Toby Hazes (Nov. 11, 2014 05:08:40 AM)
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
October, 2005, in Los Angeles, Pro Tour Head Judge Gijsbert Hoogendijk had to decide a similar situation, near the end of Day 2. Two players, one thought he'd won, or at least that his victory was certain; when he scooped his cards, the opponent claimed that was a concession.
There were a number of other factors, and the discussion among the high-level judges present led to Gis deciding that the act of scooping, without any prior communication, was a concession.
That decision set a precedent, and that's held for nearly 8 years.
It's also, as Gareth noted, an easy explanation for players: don't scoop until you confirm that you've won.
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