Originally posted by Cameron Bachman:What part of the Communication Policy has been violated?
The more I think about it, the more I want to give CPV-Warning to the active player.
I didn't include extra information about Alice, but she is a well-known player that is often around the top tables in large tournaments in our community. She is not the type of player that would accidentally show a card while thinking over a play.The fact that a player is well-known does not change the standard to which we hold them. Above all, judging needs to be fair.
Originally posted by Matthew Johnson:
On Tue Jul 09 03:44, Cameron Bachman wrote:
Would an alternative approach here be to say that she announced the spell and
is now somewhere between 601.2b and 601.2e. Particularly since they have been
communicating non-verbally, I feel this is likely to be an established method
of announcing the spell in this match. Now if she didn't activate mana
abilities and pay for the spell we're issuing a GRV, which is probably enough
to track it if we don't think she was trying to deliberately bait some
information and should dissuade her from thinking ‘out load’ in future.
Originally posted by Lyle Waldman:
I like this approach, but it does require some deviation. Strictly speaking, judges are not allowed (through action or inaction, punishment or coercion) to force players to activate mana abilities for spells they did not want to cast, or abilities they did not want to activate. Thus we need to deviate here, to force Alice to activate her mana abilities. Is this a legitimate deviation, given the circumstances? IMO it is, but I'm not sure what the Higher Ups think.
Originally posted by Lyle Waldman:>
>
> I like this approach, but it does require some deviation. Strictly speaking, judges are not allowed (through action or inaction, punishment or coercion) to force players to activate mana abilities for spells they did not want to cast, or abilities they did not want to activate. Thus we need to deviate here, to force Alice to activate her mana abilities. Is this a legitimate deviation, given the circumstances? IMO it is, but I'm not sure what the Higher Ups think.
Originally posted by Matthew Johnson:
I think that she's already taken the action of announcing the spell. We're not forcing her to activate mana abilities, but if she does then she's attempted to cast a spell without the mana available to do so. Which is a GRV. If she goes ahead and casts the card she originally shown then she hasn't gained, so its fine. If she retracts the spell she announced, then she gets a GRV. This means it's tracked, upgrades and we have something to point to if we do want to investigate for cheating.
Matt
Originally posted by Matthew Johnson:>
> I think that she's already taken the action of announcing the spell. We're not forcing her to activate mana abilities, but if she does then she's attempted to cast a spell without the mana available to do so. Which is a GRV. If she goes ahead and casts the card she originally shown then she hasn't gained, so its fine. If she retracts the spell she announced, then she gets a GRV. This means it's tracked, upgrades and we have something to point to if we do want to investigate for cheating.
>
> Matt
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