I had a case where one player picked up the top card of his opponent's deck to see what he would be playing against. Not cool, of course, but when discussing this with other judges we couldn't determine whether it was technically cheating, because he hadn't yet sat down.For me, this is somewhere between Outside Assistance and straight up Cheating. I'm going to need convincing that it's not the latter, as even someone with no knowledge of Magic rules would know that sneaking a look at your opponents cards is Bad.
Is there a difference between Regular and Competitive?I don't think so. The only difference is that you're not likely to see it at Regular. Only at Competitive events where people are looking for some sort of edge.
I had a case where one player picked up the top card of his opponent's deck to see what he would be playing against. Not cool, of course, but when discussing this with other judges we couldn't determine whether it was technically cheating, because he hadn't yet sat down.Cheating don't Care if the player is actualy in a match of not.
Edited Pascal Gemis (July 6, 2017 07:37:46 PM)
Originally posted by Mark Mc Govern:My fellow judges observed a type of player that is so married to their music that they will shuffle while standing up, so as to keep their earphones in for the highest allowable number of seconds. Is that fine, legal but frowned upon, or illegal?
I don't think there's a hard and fast rule, because if there was, players would use that fixed line to their advantage - case in point, the player who thinks standing up while shuffling means that they haven't started.
Originally posted by Mark Mc Govern:It actually happened to me (I was the other player) at a so-Regular-it-was-almost-Casual Standard Showdown. :|Is there a difference between Regular and Competitive?I don't think so. The only difference is that you're not likely to see it at Regular. Only at Competitive events where people are looking for some sort of edge.
Originally posted by Pascal Gemis:Of course, but if the match hadn't yet started, which rule was broken?
Cheating care only if a player break a rule on purpose to gain an avantage.
Originally posted by Jochem van 't Hull:I think you're getting lost in the minutiae (involving things like “the highest allowable number of seconds” is usually a red flag): are they in a situation that requires interacting with their opponent? If yes, then their earphones are better off.Originally posted by Mark Mc Govern:My fellow judges observed a type of player that is so married to their music that they will shuffle while standing up, so as to keep their earphones in for the highest allowable number of seconds. Is that fine, legal but frowned upon, or illegal?
I don't think there's a hard and fast rule, because if there was, players would use that fixed line to their advantage - case in point, the player who thinks standing up while shuffling means that they haven't started.
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