Hi all!
So, I have recently encountered some similar scenarios which I would like to shed light on.
Here is the latest.
Albert activates the second ability of his Liliana, the Last Hope. He, one by one, puts three cards into the graveyard. Nicla immediately realizes the error and calls for a judge.Now, if we work through the IPG, this is a GRV: an information has been leaked (the third card on top) by putting a card in a different set (no LEC), which is public (no HCE).
Let's get to the fix: it's supposed to be either backup or nothing.
The situation looks simple enough to backup: the three cards are put back on top in reverse order (I don't see any need for randomization if the order is known to everyone), then we resolve the ability. And then, both players continue playing
with the known extra card on top.Now, if only that card had fallen down because stuck to the one above, or if Albert had kept in hand the three cards while showing them off, this would have been a plain simple Looking at Extra Cards, fixed by a quick randomization.
I see that the definition of “sets” and some borderlines were needed to make HCE work, but this really is a
paradoxical outcame to me: in order to correct a formerly unknown extra card in the graveyard, we are supposed to generate a now known card on top of a player's library (or leave it there). As long as this kind of infraction is immediately caught, it's functionally equivalent to a LEC.
Maybe I'm missing something in the philosphy here? Maybe the leaked information needs to be regarded as an additional penalty to the player who committed the error? However, the backup should restore the game state to its closest-to-true form, while keeping the line of play intact, and I believe this is not the case.
If we agree that this is not how it's supposed to work, in my opinion, this could be solved in two ways:
1) Broaden that
“Once those cards have joined another set, the infraction is handled as a Hidden Card Error or Game Rule Violation”, maybe by exclusion of publicly revealed information. I can see this either become too wordy or led to unwanted interpretation of the definition, though.
2) Tweak the backup paragraph in order to allow for a randomization when the information hadn't been formerly legally acquired. We usually don't want to randomize if we put a random card from hand on top to rewind an end of turn or if something had been scryed. But if these don't apply, I can see fit (provided that randomizing needs always to be taken carefully).
Thanks for discussing,
Donato
Edited Donato Del Giudice (Oct. 5, 2016 02:37:13 PM)