Originally posted by IPG:
If a minor violation is quickly handled by the players to their mutual satisfaction, a judge does not need to intervene.
Originally posted by Brook Gardner-Durbin:I think it's fair to say that this most definitely isn't what happened in the game. While theoretically, this is an error that a player could make, the reality is that the player put a permanent into play tapped when it should be untapped. We should avoid trying to retcon a players actual actions to better fit some other infraction.
… by not announcing they had a floating mana…
Originally posted by Brook Gardner-Durbin:
On AP's end step, NAP casts Opt, and their sleeves are sticking. They try to pick up one card, but accidentally draw two cards.
Originally posted by Andrew Keeler:
Resolving opt as a sort of “scry 2, then draw 1” is the sort of behavior that we should be trying to discourage with a warning
Originally posted by MTR:
1.10 Players
Players are responsible for:
(…)
• Calling attention to any rules or policy infraction they notice in their matches.
Originally posted by Old MTR:
Bringing to a judge’s attention any rules or policy infraction they notice in their matches.
Originally posted by Aaron Henner:
I'm fine with a lot, but there must be some communication (and the opponent MUST be alerted so that they could, if desired, call a judge).
Edited Milan Majerčík (Oct. 12, 2017 03:02:01 AM)
Originally posted by Brook Gardner-Durbin:Originally posted by Aaron Henner:
I'm fine with a lot, but there must be some communication (and the opponent MUST be alerted so that they could, if desired, call a judge).
I like this thought, that there needs to be explicit communication.
For everyone saying the Blood Moon case isn't ok and you'd step in, I'd like to ask a couple related questions about where you'd insert yourself into a match:
– On turn 1 of the game, AP puts a swamp into play tapped and says go, NAP starts their turn.
Does this feel different to you from the shockland/blood moon scenario? They feel pretty similar to me, and my feeling is that we have a legal game state, and I'm not going to insert myself into a match to give a GRV for not announcing floating mana. Maybe AP has a misunderstanding about the rules and how basic lands work, maybe they're trying tilt their opponent … I'm fine with not being 100% about what was going through their head here.
– NAP has a blood moon in play and AP puts a swamp into play tapped, says go, NAP starts untapping.
Do you step in, on the argument AP appears confused about the rules? Would you step into any match where one player was performing legal actions, but appeared to perhaps be confused over the rules?
Originally posted by Brook Gardner-Durbin:If they're making legal plays, it's not for me to educate them on the rules (that's one of the advantages that a ‘better’ player should have). If they're not making legal plays (as in all these scenarios) that's different.
Would you step into any match where one player was performing legal actions, but appeared to perhaps be confused over the rules?
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