Originally posted by Eli Meyer:Correct. He wasn't breaking a rule, he was either hoping A had missed the trigger (that's allowed) or he himself missed the trigger.
because N doesn't know for a fact that his block is illegal … his actions don't meet the requirements for USC: Cheating?
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:Did you mean to say that he wasn't certain he was breaking a rule? He had to have broken a rule at some point, otherwise we couldn't give him a GRV.
Correct. He wasn't breaking a rule, he was either hoping A had missed the trigger (that's allowed) or he himself missed the trigger.
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:Okay, I'm super confused now :) Help?
Nope, I meant to say what I said.
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
We have not said that it can be OK to assume a trigger was missed - and that's what N does here, by declaring a block that can't be legal unless a poor assumption ends up being correct.
Originally posted by Mats Törnros:Scott Marshall
We have not said that it can be OK to assume a trigger was missed - and that's what N does here, by declaring a block that can't be legal unless a poor assumption ends up being correct.
The controller of the prowess trigger must prevent the opponent from blocking with Zurgo, or the trigger is considered missed. The Zurgo player is completely allowed to attempt to block with Zurgo, and it's up to the opponent to stop him. At least this is how I would read the IPG and it doesn't appear to leave much room for interpretation.
Originally posted by Toby:Jared also added a valuable perspective:
Missed Triggers are defined in terms of *demonstrating* awareness of the trigger at or before the first relevant point, and the rules to do that are concretely defined. That allows the opponent to proceed with a level of certainty (“it's not missed until something happens that shows you it is”). Introducing the idea that there's still a possible timeline where we have a non-missed trigger+GRV is problematic there, and we'd need to shift to rules based on whether the judge believes the player was actually aware of the trigger, rather than demonstrated that awareness.
Jared
A GRV is a violation of the game rules and an opponent who is paying attention should be able to catch it and call attention to it. In this case, the opponent has no such ability to catch the error because there was no indication give that the Prowess trigger resolved. In the case of a particularly complex combat, what if you are unwilling to back up and fix the error? In most cases the simple answer of, “if you had caught the error sooner” is perfectly relevant, but in this case, there was nothing to catch until damage assignment, and the opponent was operating under a very straightforward interpretation of what happened.
You must be registered in order to post to this forum.