Edited Jarrett Boutilier (Oct. 13, 2016 12:10:12 PM)
Edited Shawn Doherty (Oct. 11, 2016 08:07:36 AM)
Originally posted by Philip Böhm:
Was Aaron using his rules knowledge to his advantage and bait the Reverse Damage out of Nolan completely legally?Or, was the Reverse Damage cast only on the assumption that Fireball has a target and would be rewinded because of “unclear communication”. ?
Originally posted by Philip Böhm:
Assuming Nolan lets the Fireball resolve, Aaron would probably claim Nolan was dead. I mean, the target was obvious, no ?
Originally posted by Philip Böhm:
Nolan can confirm that (Aaron didn't verbally anoounce any targets), but insists that “it's clear that this Fireball was directed/targetting Nolan.”
Originally posted by Iván R. Molia:
@Eric: If Aaron never play before a fireball, but play others spells like lightning bolt… You will include it??
Originally posted by Philip Böhm:This “additional note” makes this situation cheating. If Aaron is intentionally leaving the targets ambiguous until Nolan does (or doesn't) let it resolve, he's violating game rules to gain advantage.
Additional note:
Assuming Nolan lets the Fireball resolve, Aaron would probably claim Nolan was dead. I mean, the target was obvious, no ?
Edited Eli Meyer (Oct. 11, 2016 06:11:48 PM)
Originally posted by Eric Paré:
I wouldn't include Lightning Bolt to determine Aaron's intentions with Fireball because Bolt actually needs to have a target whereas Fireball doesn't.
Edited Philip Ockelmann (Oct. 12, 2016 11:52:34 AM)
Originally posted by Philip Körte:By asking clarifying questions. Acting on your assumptions is a really bad strategy, and judges should not be expected to improve that strategy.
how can a player ever not assume