Edited Darcy Alemany (July 12, 2013 01:58:29 AM)
Edited Peter Richmond (July 12, 2013 02:01:21 AM)
Originally posted by Darcy Alemany:
I am curious about the philosophy behind this change. Why is this particular situation specifically not DEC, instead of a downgrade of DEC to Warning similar to when the card is uniquely identifiable and easily returnable? I mean, I recognize that the practical answer is “because the IPG says so”, but I noticed that Toby doesn't say much about the decision to consider it a separate infraction in his blog post, so I'm just curious why this avenue was chosen.
Edited Jeff S Higgins (July 12, 2013 12:12:24 PM)
Originally posted by Peter Richmond:
The philosophy for the penalty for Drawing Extra Cards stems from its potential to be overlooked by the opponent. The update fixes the scenario where the opponent does not overlook the draw, and actually “confirms” it. Take it, for instance, that a player resolves Brainstorm and asks “Draw 4?” The opponent says “Yes.” Since the opponent didn't overlook the draw, the philosophy for the penalty is no longer fitting. In addition, an opponent shouldn't be able to allow their opponents to draw cards they should not have drawn in order to have them receive a higher penalty. As such, the penalty is lower.
Edited Carlos Navarrete Granado (July 12, 2013 03:58:07 PM)
Originally posted by Jeffrey Higgins:If the player agrees, it's just a GRV. So we will probably rewind the draw in the usual way if they catch it right away. (Random card back on top. No shuffle.)
what would the remedy be?
Carlos Navarrete GranadoThis seems logical. There is no reason to think Brainstorm draws you 4, but there is plenty of chance to get a Sphinx's Revelation count wrong with Thalia in play. (Of course, this was a GRV before if you confirmed X with your opponent before drawing the cards due to incorrect costs paid, but this change in policy removes any ambiguity about it.) A better example might be -3 on Garruk and saying “Draw 5?” implicitly because of your Wurm token, forgetting that Illness in the Ranks is in play.
the opponent explicitly agrees to the cards being drawn ALONG with the number of cards is not DEC
Originally posted by Carlos Navarrete Granado:We expect this to be a very unusual circumstance; we just want it to be clear that, if this mistake is a cooperative effort, it is not DEC.
not explicitly asking about the numbers of cards to be drawn
Lyle WaldmanReadings are good for you, m'kay? (heh)
without reading 23 pages of text to find a single sentence
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
Those aren't specific answers to your questions, Lyle, but I'll confess that I'm not sure what your first question is asking about. The 2nd question? That remedy has not changed.
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