Originally posted by Jeph Foster:
I will start by saying I was one of the people involved in this situation, and seeing this this discussion makes me super happy. (:
What if you're like 95% sure that you remember the cards in the affected players hand based on either memory, or the way you sorted the cards during the deck check?
Edited Bernd Buldt (April 20, 2013 10:28:42 PM)
Originally posted by Trey Cizek:By all means, do!
Let me play Devil's Advocate for a moment.
Originally posted by Trey Cizek:Just a quick remark to make sure we're on the same page here. I understand “opening hand” per CR 103.4 to be defined as what you decided to keep after you resolved all mulligans.
I'd kept my opening seven and therefore would not be allowed to make mulligans
Originally posted by Bernd Buldt:Trey CizekJust a quick remark to make sure we're on the same page here. I understand “opening hand” per CR 103.4 to be defined as what you decided to keep after you resolved all mulligans.
I'd kept my opening seven and therefore would not be allowed to make mulligans
Originally posted by Trey Cizek:No. What a player decides to keep after he or she has resolved x mulligans, with x≥0, becomes their opening hand (= OH). As such, you can't have an OH w/o having made mulligan decisions. So, if we give a player a fresh set of seven cards, it becomes an OH only after he or she has decided to resolve all mulligans, if any. That is how I understand things (should) work.
At this point, do you consider these seven cards to be A's “opening hand”
Originally posted by Dominik Chlobowski:Basically b/c of what George said earlier, ie, for logistics reasons.
but why do we allow deck checks after Opening Hands are decided?
Edited Bernd Buldt (April 21, 2013 03:57:02 PM)
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:And I'm pretty sure many of us have our fair share of stories about how we caught a cheater after the opening hands had already been drawn.
Dominik, we changed to allow deck checks after opening hands because players had learned to avoid deck checks by rushing ahead.