A triggered ability that causes a change in the visible game state (including life totals) or requires a choice upon resolution: The controller must take the appropriate physical action or acknowledge the specific trigger before taking any game actions (such as casting a sorcery spell or explicitly taking an action in the next step or phase) that can be taken only after the triggered ability should have resolved.
Originally posted by Javier Martin Arjona:Nope, this syntax isn't meant to be that complex.
On both sides of the colon have two parts separated by “or”.
Does “The controller must take the appropriate physical action” refer just to “A triggered ability that causes a change in the visible game state”? And does “acknowledge the specific trigger” refer just for “requires a choice upon resolution”?
Originally posted by Javier Martin Arjona:This is a GRV, for failing to properly resolve a clearly acknowledged trigger.
Is this a missed trigger because Adam didn´t take the appropriate physical action or it is not a missed trigger because Adam acknowledges the specific trigger before passing priority to a next phase?
Originally posted by Shae Rivard:Whose responsibility is it to determine that there is only one trigger that could have triggered? What if one or both players are wrong, and they forgot a permanent with a triggered ability that was buried amongst a stack of lands?
That is my understanding Dominik, so long as there's only 1 thing a player could possibly be referring to when saying “trigger”, then simply saying “trigger” is sufficient action to acknowledge it. Otherwise, they need to be more specific.
Edited Eli Meyer (Oct. 26, 2016 02:27:41 PM)
Originally posted by Dominik Chłobowski:uhhh… no, I'm not. I am confused as to why you believe that; I suspect that you're ignoring the original post, it's critical context for what I wrote.
We're confused because he's contradicting previous
communications on missed triggers.
Originally posted by Javier Martin Arjona:
Adam casts and resolves Kitchen Finks and says “trigger” {and fails to take the appropriate the physical action}
Scott Marshall
This is a GRV, for failing to properly resolve a clearly acknowledged trigger.
Annotated IPG
Saying ‘Trigger’ is not sufficient. You need to clearly indicate what the specific trigger is.
Edited Dominik Chłobowski (Oct. 29, 2016 02:22:14 PM)
Edited Bryan Prillaman (Oct. 29, 2016 03:02:29 PM)
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