Edited Lyle Waldman (June 23, 2013 11:13:47 PM)
Originally posted by Jason Wong:
2. It's not your job to determine whether Rewind being in exile or the graveyard will “matter enough”. It's your job to step in when you see that an error has occurred. In this case, an error occurred, so you should step in. How would you feel if, later in that game, the opponent cast a counterable spell, and the player were sitting with a Snapcaster Mage in hand?
Originally posted by Justin Rix:
How was exiling it a mistake? The angel was a legal target, so the lands untap, rewind resolves and gets exiled. The angel just doesn't get countered. Is this incorrect?
Originally posted by Jasper Overman:
There was a fair amount of Out of order sequencing, since the 'Target Fiend Hunter, Target Angel of Serenity ' only go on the stack after the Restoration Angel resolves; and both triggers can be responded to.
I'm not sure if you meant to not allow the Rewind to be played, because the Restoration Angel is uncounterable, or because the Restoration Angel already resolved. In the first case, casting the Rewind is a valid play (maybe even to also untap some Nephalia Drownyards?), in the second case, you were watching so you can see if AP rushed through the target announcements on all the triggers, and whether it's still OK to cast the Rewind.
Either way, if you see an error, step in. Simply ask the players what is happening, and then decide whether a GRV occured, and whether the game needs fixing.
Originally posted by Gareth Tanner:
The NAP has said “OK” to the Restoration Angel which is generally accepted as “I have no response that spell resolves” meaning trying to Rewind it once the ability has triggered is not a legal play.
If the players are playing in a way that is clear to both players, but might cause confusion to an external observer, judges are encouraged to request that the players make the situation clear, but not issue any penalty.
Originally posted by Oren Firestein:Gareth Tanner
The NAP has said “OK” to the Restoration Angel which is generally accepted as “I have no response that spell resolves” meaning trying to Rewind it once the ability has triggered is not a legal play.
“OK” is not a standard tournament shortcut in English (I have no idea what any Japanese equivalent might mean). Based on the players' nonverbal communication, you might decide that the NAP implicitly passed priority, but the “OK” is only a small part of that.
In general, “OK” doesn't mean anything in Magic. By itself, it does not pass priority.
Edited Gareth Tanner (June 25, 2013 02:38:51 AM)
Originally posted by Oren Firestein:
The NAP has said “OK” to the Restoration Angel which is generally accepted as “I have no response that spell resolves” meaning trying to Rewind it once the ability has triggered is not a legal play.
Originally posted by Philip Körte:While that might be a fine way to deal with most situations, would you rule that way even if it becomes obvious that OK doesn't mean the same thing to the players? I'm used to the same kind of meaning of OK, but every once in a while I've stumbled with players who don't use the expression in the same way, and whose knowledge of English is so limited that expecting them to be completely clear in their communication is impossible (although we can suggest ways to improve it, like flashing an open hand to imply that they don't want to move forward).
If you do basically anything besides announcing a spell/ability, or saying something along the terms of ‘wait, I need to think’ that passes your priority.'Ok' (without anything immediatly following it), in my book, is not along this, so you passed priority.
Originally posted by Carlos Ho:There have been a number of instances, at Grand Prix and Pro Tours, where a Japanese player said “OK” and meant “I understand what you're doing, I will respond soon”. It's true that many European and North American players use “OK” to mean “that resolves” or “no response” - but, as Carlos and Adam have pointed out (from first-hand experience), that's not global.
Actually, it's not so rare to see players say OK as “I acknowledge that you're playing that” instead of “OK, it resolves”. It happens especially with non-native English speakers.
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