Edited Josh Stansfield (Nov. 19, 2014 07:49:37 PM)
Ambiguous or unclear names on a decklist may allow a player to manipulate the contents of his or her deck up until the point at which they are discovered. The Head Judge may choose to not issue this penalty if they believe that what the player wrote on their decklist is obvious and unambiguous, even if it is not the full, accurate name of the card.
The Head Judge may choose to not issue this penalty if they believe that what the player wrote on their decklist is obvious and unambiguous, even if it is not the full, accurate name of the card. This should be determined solely by what is written on the decklist, and not based on intent or the actual contents of the deck; needing to check the deck for confirmation is a sign that the entry is not obvious.
This should be determined solely by what is written on the decklist, and not based on intent given the actual contents of the deck; needing to check the deck for confirmation is a sign that the entry is not obvious.
Edited Thomas Ludwig (Nov. 20, 2014 12:19:28 AM)
Originally posted by Thomas Ludwig:The scenario was clear that all spells were blue or artifacts. And, like any scenario, when you start messing around with the dials, knobs, and buttons, the machine goes a bit haywire…
he could as well need swamps, because the artifacts offer blue and his stuff needs black
Ambiguos or unclear names on a decklist may allow a player to manipulate the contents of his or her deck up until the point at which they are discovered. The Head Judge may choose to not issue this penalty if they believe that what the player wrote on their decklist is obvious and unambiguous, even if it is not the full, accurate name of the card. This should be determined solely by what is written on the decklist, and not the deck; needing to check the deck for confirmation is a sign that the entry is not obvious.
Edited Ernst Jan Plugge (Nov. 20, 2014 01:52:17 PM)
Originally posted by Oscar Chan:
If this is a Standard GPT, it would be obvious that it was 23 Islands. When I do a deck check, if there is a different number of Islands and/or other cards, I will issue a Game Loss, as per the IPG. If there is exactly 23 Islands, I will not issue the penalty, but I will tell the player to be more careful and change the “23 _________” to “23 Island”.
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