Edited Maxime Hoube (May 3, 2016 09:17:24 AM)
Originally posted by Mark Mc Govern:
I'd say to Ned that casting Warrior's Lesson after no blockers have been declared on the one creature that's attacking looks to me like a shortcut. If needed, I'd also ask him if he truly believed that Arya cast it with zero targets, or whether he was hoping to somehow create an infraction out of nothing. If he looks like he's about to answer “yes” to that first part I'll be sure to remind him that lying to a judge is a serious thing.
Originally posted by Isaac King:
Are we really going to let Arya draw here?
Originally posted by Isaac King:
While her intent was clear, casting the spell with no targets is a perfectly legal action, and that's technically what she did. Consider the example of AP attacking with a 3/3 with trample, and NAP blocks with a 2/2. Neither player writes down a loss of one life for NAP. If next turn, AP remembers the trample, are we going to let her have it just because that was her intent?
As a side note, why does Warriors' Lesson have that specific wording?
Edited Pascal Gemis (May 4, 2016 03:15:02 AM)
Originally posted by Isaac King:
… casting the spell with no targets is a perfectly legal action, and that's technically what she did.
Originally posted by Pascal Gemis:As a side note, why does Warriors' Lesson have that specific wording?
Because sometimes you want to cast it with only one target.
Originally posted by Isaac King:
If a player says “attack you with my Grizzly Bears”, then later tries to assign the damage to a planeswalker, it doesn't matter what he meant to do, what matters is what he did.
A player is assumed to be attacking another player with his or her creatures and not any planeswalkers that player may control unless the attacking player specifies otherwise.
Originally posted by Isaac King:
What if Ned saw that Arya had chosen 0 targets, and used that information to decide how to block?
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