Originally posted by Jochem van 't Hull:The game ended when the two shook hands. Who shuffled is completely irrelevant to me, assuming you believe everything else going on. What you have described is that AP attacked for what they thought was lethal, NAP admitted AP had no way of knowing that NAP could actually win and they shook hands. Game over.Originally posted by Mike Combs:AP shuffled up. No way to verify that it was indeed lethal and since they're very-to-somewhat inexperienced players I wouldn't put it past either of them to have misjudged lethal.
AP tapped out to attack for lethal, AP extended their hand signalling the game was over, NAP accepted the handshake, NAP gave AP no reason to think NAP could/would win this game, and NAP gave the judge no reason to think AP had any reason to think they were not the winner. Match is over at this point. What happens now (unless it's a discussion) has zero bearing on my ruling. AP won.
Originally posted by Iván R. Molia:I'm simply taking the words that were written and giving *my* perspective here.
If AP shuffle up without tells something like “I win”… Why we assume they will win??
AP only atacks with all (all-in) and “He/She thinks was lethal” but don't tell it, check o anything else!! only shuffle up.
Why NAP must do to a Jedi mind read trick to tell “ey! stop… i'll survive!”?
I'm not much experimented as Judge, but play since 20 years (about)… and I never saw a “shuffle up as winner” but I saw lot of times an “all-in-suicide-atack and shuffle and concede”.
Originally posted by Mike Combs:
I'm simply taking the words that were written and giving *my* perspective here.
What has been given to us is that AP attacked for lethal (NAP doesn't dispute that it would be lethal), AP offered their hand, NAP shook their hand. *To me* the game is over at that point.
If these players had randomly shook hands “many” times previously, or something weird like that, then maybe we're having a different discussion, but that didn't happen here. AP attacked, offered a hand, NAP shook the hand, game was over and AP started packing up. Having something in your hand that you could have used but didn't is part of the game; showing it to a judge after the game is over is not the same as having done that thing in the game.
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