Originally posted by Kenji Suzuki:One major clue here might be where the card was dropped. If it was under the table of the player's previous match, we can be pretty sure he presented an illegal deck.
Of course, if there are anything which indicate when and who dropped a card, that is different situation.
Originally posted by Jonas Drieghe:
One major clue here might be where the card was dropped. If it was under the table of the player's previous match, we can be pretty sure he presented an illegal deck.
Originally posted by Thiago Perígolo Souza:Have fun in your deep, dark corner… ;)
the corner case of the corner case
if a player takes a game action after removing the card from the library, the offense is no longer Looking at Extra Cards.
Originally posted by Nathen Millbank:Well, it's not “clearly” if several L2+ judges ruled differently prior to seeing this thread.
I think this is clearly a LEC, as is any dexterity error that knocks a card out of the library while shuffling.
Adam Kolipiński
The reason I ruled out LaEC the first time I have seen Petr's question, is this line from LaEC definition:if a player takes a game action after removing the card from the library, the offense is no longer Looking at Extra Cards.
Should we use this point only to distinguish if card is already drawn, or just looked at, not to every LaEC cases?
Originally posted by Petr Hudeček:
That seems to be a valid argument that this is not a LaEC.
Originally posted by Chris Nowak:The IPG is not written with technical preciseness. This was said by high-level judges. And I don't think we should be making any judgments based on whether LaEC refers to the deck or the library, the author of the IPG surely didn't want them to have different meanings here. The Annotated IPG also doesn't say that there is any difference between a deck and a library.
I don't think that switch in language is accidental.