I always try to remind the players in these types of discussions that the game state may change only a small bit at a time, and it has developed over a long period of time via these small changes.
If they are rethinking the same things that they just thought about, I'm more inclined to call Slow Play. And yes, if the player doesn't know how to play it reasonably quickly, he can get GL's, etc. No one and no rule guarantees a player enough time to find the optimal play, but the rules DO require a player to play fast enough to be able to complete the match in 50 min.
-Eric Shukan
Woburn, MA
—– Original Message —–
From: Adam Zakreski
To:
eshukan@verizon.net Sent: Friday, December 28, 2012 8:44 PM
Subject: Slow play and Eggs/Second Breakfast (Tournament Operations)
Recently at a GP during one of the events I was judging I repeatedly ran into an issue with one player playing Eggs. Nearly every match I stopped to observe, the player was taking 30 seconds or so to make each decision. As this deck quickly evolves into more of a solitaire match, I noticed many opponents exceedingly frustrated, waiting for the player to make decisions. In reference to the recent slow play article, everyone (judges, spectators, and the opponent), were very bored. In a number of occasions when the round when to time this was the only match left still going and given how long a turn can take with this deck, those extra 5 turns can bee exceedingly long.
It should be noted that there were a handful of other players playing the same deck and they moved along at a very brisk pace. I assume the discrepancy was simply that this one player was not as well practiced with the deck as the others.
I tried to encourage him to speed up, but he seemed t o be unable to process the board state any faster. He would go through the motions of cracking an egg, looking at the card, then waiting another 20 seconds, cracking another, etc. At this point, after issuing a slow play warning, it seemed this was going to devolve into a game loss each match, effectively amounting to a DQ.
My questions:
- Is it appropriate to penalize a player with a game loss (losses?) for not being familiar enough with with an exceptionally complex deck to play at a brisk pace?
- What are some effective strategies on coping with Eggs? I've heard enough stories like this from other people that it seems to be a common issue with the deck.
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