Originally posted by Mark Mc Govern:
The problem with the default fix is that the identity of the object isn't known to both players, as it wasn't revealed.
Originally posted by Matt Wall:Yes.
Was ‘improperly casting Sphinx’s Revelation' a publicly-correctable error, given that the card should have been in a public zone (the stack), and the opponent could have caught it then (“okay, show me the Rev”)?
Originally posted by Cristóbal Vigar Guerrero:
Actually, I think that this may be Cheating. Why?
Can the player who cast Sphinx Revelation prove that he had the card in his hand before drawing the cards?
If he can't prove and you can't (investigating this) prove it, he actually casted a spell and resolve it, without having it in his hand.
Originally posted by Matt Wall:Yes; this remains a GRV, not an HCE.
Was ‘improperly casting Sphinx’s Revelation' a publicly-correctable error
Cristóbal Vigar GuerreroCertainly, it *MAY* be - and it is a good idea to investigate something like this, to make sure it meets the criteria - as Riki explained.
Actually, I think that this may be Cheating.
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:Matt WallYes; this remains a GRV, not an HCE.
Was ‘improperly casting Sphinx’s Revelation' a publicly-correctable error
Cristóbal Vigar Guerrero
Actually, I think that this may be Cheating.
Originally posted by Cristóbal Vigar Guerrero:
Originally posted by Cristóbal Vigar Guerrero:
Is he trying to gain an advantage?
As we read, he's gaining cards and lives. He's gaining an advantage.
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