Originally posted by Chris Nowak:
I think I'd have to ask why Nate was sitting there so long. 10 seconds seems a really long time to take to choose a target (especially if he was making no indication of being in thought). How often do we wait for our opponent to prod us for an answer our own card requires us to give?
Was his selection a misunderstanding of how trigger targets work? Or was he taking advantage of time to try to bait information out from his opponent (were there other cards in the graveyard that could have been chosen if Annie didn't cast a blue spell)?
His answer to that might send me into some uncomfortable places.
Originally posted by Joshua Feingold:
I think John Brian has cracked the case here. If priority hasn't been passed, then the trigger is not missed. However, the trigger is also on the stack below the Dig, meaning that Pyroblast can't do anything yet.
Originally posted by Joshua Feingold:Technically, the trigger isn't on the stack until a target is chosen - so Nate's been waiting to put the trigger on the stack all this time. (Yeah, that's a bit odd…)
The trigger has been on the stack the whole time. Nate just hasn't mentioned it yet.
If an opponent requires information about the precise timing of a triggered ability or needs details about a game object that may be affected by a resolved triggered ability, that player may need to acknowledge that ability’s existence before its controller does.It seems that Annie needs to acknowledge that trigger, in order to learn what card is targeted to gain Flashback.
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