Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
As for that line in Toby's blog post, I'm going to go ahead and put words in his mouth - and Toby can correct me if I'm wrong: I think that “and talk about {it} with other judges later” refers to our love of discussing odd policy scenarios - i.e., an acknowledgment that we'll do that anyway, not meant as an action item.
Originally posted by Markus Bauer:Hi Markus,
I personally think that the difference between top of library and bottom of library isn't huge.
When we shuffle we usually make sure that unrandomized parts remain where they are. Wouldn't it be possible to apply the fix and shuffle the random part. This way the possibility of abusing the rule is gone but the penalty is arguably pretty hard.
Why has this not been considered? As I understood the article we want to discuss how to make the new policy better and this seems like a good way to me.
Originally posted by Dan Collins:I'm tempted to say “because it's not supported by policy”, but that's a bit snarky, even for me. :)
We agree that this is not supported by policy, but is there a reason it isn't permitted?
Originally posted by Eli Meyer:Markus BauerHi Markus,
I personally think that the difference between top of library and bottom of library isn't huge.
When we shuffle we usually make sure that unrandomized parts remain where they are. Wouldn't it be possible to apply the fix and shuffle the random part. This way the possibility of abusing the rule is gone but the penalty is arguably pretty hard.
Why has this not been considered? As I understood the article we want to discuss how to make the new policy better and this seems like a good way to me.
In the situation in the original post, the cards are already shuffled in. What do you think would be fixed by shuffling again?
Edited Markus Bauer (Feb. 4, 2016 03:51:58 AM)
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