Originally posted by Yuval Tzur:
While sideboarding, a player notices he had a sideboard card in his deck on game 1, that wasn't drawn, looked at, or moved from the library during the game. He calls a judge immediately.
Jonas BreindahlExactly. A player admits he did something illegal. You can't prove it, you can't catch it the player would've gotten away with it, but the player decided to confess. He called you and admitted that he did something wrong because he decided to be honest.
While it does sound like DDLP it is actually not. Since the player is currently not playing a game where we or the opponent can verify that an incorrect card was presented we cannot give a penalty.
Originally posted by Yuval Tzur:
A player becomes aware that his decklist is illegal/doesn't match his deck and notifies a judge in between rounds.
Jonas BreindahlIn this case, a player had a 16-card sideboard listed (the actual sideboard was legal). If a player wanted to use that to his advantage, he would've waited until we check the list and maybe even miss the error. A player came forward and told us about the error.
There are scenarios here where the player does not get a penalty. If the decklist is legal, but does not match the players deck, he can locate the cards from the decklist and start playing a legal deck. If the list is illegal or he wishes to change it, he has managed to gain an advantage in that he can add/edit the list after the event has started.
Originally posted by Yuval Tzur:
A player notices a marking on a sleeve in his deck and calls a judge before looking at the front side of the card.
Jonas BreindahlI was next to the table. A player drew a card and noticed that the next card (the one that's now on top of the library) has an ink stain (and it was definitely a stain and not man-made). The player could have easily waited until sideboarding to clean/replace the sleeve, but he called a judge instead.
How do you know that the player called a judge immediately as he noticed that the card was marked?
Originally posted by Yuval Tzur:This is not an infraction, and no penalty should be assessed (thus, no need for a downgrade).
While sideboarding, a player notices he had a sideboard card in his deck on game 1, that wasn't drawn, looked at, or moved from the library during the game. He calls a judge immediately.
Originally posted by Yuval Tzur:As Jonas noted, you can correct your deck to match the list (no infraction), correct the list to match the deck (Game Loss), or … well, I guess you could be Cheating, if you knowingly play with a deck that doesn't match the list.
A player becomes aware that his decklist is illegal/doesn't match his deck and notifies a judge in between rounds.
Originally posted by Yuval Tzur:Again, not an infraction, so no downgrade needed. Imagine a player calling you over while shuffling, after resolving a tutor or fetch effect, and saying “Judge, I just broke this sleeve…” - clearly, that's not Marked Cards, you just help them fix it. Your example is no different.
A player notices a marking on a sleeve in his deck and calls a judge before looking at the front side of the card.
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