Edited Anthony Hullings (Feb. 13, 2016 08:17:46 PM)
Originally posted by Anthony Hullings:
Player A casts Collected company, looks at five cards, makes two valid choices and puts the remaing cards on the bottom of the library then passes turn. Player B then untaps for turn then draws a card. During Player B's Main phase, they realize Player A looked at five cards from collected company instead of six.
This definitely falls under example A. for Hidden card Error, but it feels more like a GRV. How would this be resolved if enforced as a Hidden card Error?
A player draws four cards after casting Ancestral Recall
A player commits a Game Play Error that cannot be corrected by only publicly available
information and does so without his or her opponent’s permission.
Edited Dan Collins (Feb. 13, 2016 08:21:23 PM)
Originally posted by Dan Collins:
First, remember that the examples don't define the infraction, the definition does. Example A is:A player draws four cards after casting Ancestral Recall
I don't understand what you mean by comparing drawing an extra card with looking at one card too few. But regardless, the definition?A player commits a Game Play Error that cannot be corrected by only publicly available
information and does so without his or her opponent’s permission.
I'd actually argue that this *can* be fixed using publicly available information. The information needed to correct this error is the top card of A's library. Had this been caught immediately, we would have “fixed” this by having A look at the 6th card and then placing it on the bottom of his library. Since this isn't one of those situations that is impossible to correct even when caught immediately, it isn't HCE. (That doesn't mean we'll actually fix it that way - too much time has passed for even a rewind, and no partial fix is appropriate. However, a GRV does not become HCE simply because too many subsequent actions were taken.)
Originally posted by Dan Collins:
OK, I see.
Originally posted by Chris Nowak:Dan Collins
OK, I see.
It looks like something in Anthony's post disappeared. I don't see anything there other than “Fixed grammatical error”.
Put me in for not-HCE, for the reasons you mentioned. But also, the fix seems like it would have to be “have the player look at the card then shuffle it into random portion of the library”, which is a bit silly and seems like a clue that HCE is probably the wrong tool since its intended to be intuitive most of the time.
I like GRV, no rewind here.
This infraction only applies when an unknown card is in a hidden location both before and after
the error. If cards are placed into a public zone their order is known and the infraction can be
handled as a Game Rule Violation.
So your point (please correct me if I'm wrong) is that even though that #6th card is ‘unknown’ as to what it is, it is still ‘known’ because of the placement of the card in the library? As in, we all know what card it is through publicly available information.
How would you assess this penalty? GRV or HCE?
I assume from your other post you don't believe a fix is warranted. I can see the logic in that to some extent - although I do feel that fixing it does not harm the overall game state.
Edited Dan Collins (Feb. 14, 2016 12:23:43 PM)
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