Originally posted by Bryan Li:
I feel like everyone's assuming that the second Magma Spray was just drawn during Ned's turn. It could easily have already been his hand, and there's nothing in the original scenario to suggest otherwise.
That´s right… but either way, Anna shouldn´t have seen that card. I don´t say that we leave the game state as is as a punishment. Bad things happened and we can´t really fix this.
Either a card has been revealed to Anna and Ned got to see his next draw (rewinding), a decission has been taken over a wrong -and now different- game state (partial fix), or a card ended in the wrong zone due to a sloppy play (no fix whatsoever).
I really feel bad for this, as it seems that Anna just moved her hands wrong, even remembering the Swan Song should go to her hand… but if in the same fashion Ned was genuinely oblivious to this, he had not commited a worse thing… he has been just as sloppy as her. I see both of them doing things wrong, and either fix could reasonably be advantageous to one player (most likely Anna, but I don´t really care about which). As we are now, things are bad only for her, but at least that´s what they both did.
walker metyko
disrupting the game state was my main concern and I was really divided on which to choose. I do agree it doesn't feel right to return the Swan Song (which usually signals it isn't the right thing to do). However the philosophy is what convinced me
"While Game Rule Violations can be attributed to one player, they usually occur publicly and both players are expected to be mindful of what is happening in the game. It is tempting to try and “fix” these errors, but it is important that they be handled consistently, regardless of their impact on the game"
That´s a very big thing, which ruminated a lot in my head… Certainly, that´s why we should apply the partial fix. But is returning a counter to Anna´s hand disrputive in the current game state?
We take back on this after the next quote.
Dylan Goings
I disagree with Juan that a backup (even a “safe” one) would arrive at a more correct game state. We don't know enough information to know whether Ned would still play the Magma Spray into the Swan Song if everything had been done correctly (maybe he's trying to bait out counters and wants the bird tokens), and now that he's seen another card from his draw those lines of play may be even more complicated. If Ned's play is based on the assumption that the Swan Song is definitely in the graveyard and he gets bitten for that with the partial fix, well, that's why he's getting a GPE-FtMGS. I see this as a great education opportunity to dissuade a player from abusing something like this in the future and suffering worse consequences.
For the first part, we don´t have enough information to know if Ned would have still played the Magma Spray, that´s right, but that´s precisely why I didn´t liked to force him to keep casting it. I hadn´t considered initially the fact that he saw a new card himself and that would affect his decission even more, that helps fully discarding a normal back up, I guess…
The last part of your message is what I see really important and enlightner. With that, and the above quote from Metyko, we should take the partial fix way… but I still want to defend the no-fix:
I don´t like saying that he should got bitten for not maintaining the game state… If that´s the case, shouldn´t Anna be bitten by not resolving correctly the Swan Song? Isn´t it something with abuse potential? I mean, I simulate to missresolve it, let you play a card and then go “oh my, that should be in my hand!”
It all boils down to:
-Is partial fixing disruptive here? (not being disruptive is privative to that rule as it is written).
If it isn´t, let´s be consistent, as Walker points out.
If it is, and that is my guess, we should make both of them responsible for what happened and continue playing from here. It actually is educational and would dissuade future occurances of missplaying things.