Edited José Moreira (July 24, 2013 09:20:00 PM)
Originally posted by José Moreira:
To me it seems more like a “cheating” case - for not revealing the rest of the oracle…
edit: Scott was faster.
Its ok to say just part of the card? isn't that a problem?
Edited Philip Ockelmann (July 24, 2013 09:34:16 PM)
Edited Philip Ockelmann (July 24, 2013 10:37:32 PM)
Originally posted by Philip Körte:
Because in that case, I (and I in this case means any player) could help my friends by stating derived info.
Any person physically present at a tournament and not in any other category above is a spectator. Spectators are responsible for remaining silent and passive during matches and other official tournament sections in which players are also required to be silent. If spectators believe they have observed a rules or policy violation, they are encouraged to alert a judge as soon as possible. At Regular or Competitive REL, spectators are permitted to ask the players to pause the match while they alert a judge. At Professional REL, spectators must not interfere with the match directly.
Edited Philip Böhm (July 24, 2013 10:09:02 PM)
Edited Andrew Heckt (July 24, 2013 10:18:17 PM)
Originally posted by Philip Körte:I think you'd have a hard time convincing most of us that you weren't providing strategic advice; clever wording doesn't change the intent.
Also, if his opponent is about to pass the turn and he has mana open or even floating, I am allowed to tell him ‘you still have Think Twice in your Graveyard’, as long as I do not say ‘you should play Think Twice’?
Originally posted by Philip Körte:I think most of us read the original scenario as “hey, that card also says FOO” - i.e., correcting an incomplete statement. I certainly didn't read between the lines and get to “better counter that”. (I acknowledge that an investigation could result in that conclusion.)
I know this is basically saying the same thing, but then again, so is ‘Echoing Truth bounces all your Tokens’ and ‘you need to counter this if you can’….
Edited Scott Marshall (July 24, 2013 10:22:01 PM)
Originally posted by Casey Brefka:
Oracle text is derived information, so as long as an answer that is true is given, the entire Oracle text doesn't need to be given by the opponent. No one has cheated here.
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