Originally posted by Mario Haßler:Yes! (LOL) I once built a Shared Fate deck, with something (can't recall what) that Exiled my library when it EtB. The opponent didn't lose to the draw step, but he also didn't get any more cards … and I had his whole library, lands included, to kill him with. Just like this deck, it was my own fault… :)
is it player A's own fault to play such a deck
Edited Philip Ockelmann (March 19, 2013 06:07:20 PM)
Originally posted by Philip Körte:
This is rather similar to having a Tamiyo Emblem in play and repeatedly casting Sphinx' Revelation for zero, which I believe happened at a T2-GP (Bochum 2012, I believe) and resulted in a DQ for stalling - taking absolutely legal/possible game-actions, but these don't contribute to the Gamestate in a relevant way (it does increase the Stormcount and makes the player spend Mana/Tap lands, so it does contribute to a change in the Gamestate, just not in a relevant way), in order to run down the Clock.
Originally posted by Philip Körte:
Therefor I'd also like an official answer on this, if at all possible, to be able to give a correct ruling on this.
Edited Brian Schenck (March 19, 2013 05:16:18 PM)
Originally posted by Philip Körte:
can he reveal his library/DL, and can the opponent deny the shortcut without a real reason
Edited Mario Haßler (March 20, 2013 05:05:45 AM)
Originally posted by Philip Körte:
So, if the Shared Fate player chooses to reveal his library while resolving some ability that allows him to search his library (thereby giving his opponent perfect information about the contents of his deck), can he now propose the shortcut, and can the opponent reject it even if he cannot come up with a (combination of) cards that change anything of the situation?
Edited Vincent Roscioli (March 20, 2013 09:57:35 AM)
Originally posted by Mario Haßler:
I also added that it is unlikely that the judge would take a look at all the cards on the battlefield and in the players' libraries and graveyards to get the full picture of the situation and then decide that player B indeed can't change the situation and that the game will end in player A's favor.
Philip Körte
So, if the Shared Fate player chooses to reveal his library while resolving some ability that allows him to search his library (thereby giving his opponent perfect information about the contents of his deck), can he now propose the shortcut, and can the opponent reject it even if he cannot come up with a (combination of) cards that change anything of the situation?
Edited Brian Schenck (March 20, 2013 10:35:25 AM)
Originally posted by Mario Haßler:I'll go a bit further than Brian (Judges … “should probably refrain”), and instead say “Judges, don't even think about it.”
I also added that it is unlikely that the judge would take a look at all the cards on the battlefield and in the players' libraries and graveyards to get the full picture of the situation and then decide that player B indeed can't change the situation and that the game will end in player A's favor.
Edited Scott Marshall (March 20, 2013 12:18:46 PM)
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