Originally posted by David Jimenez III:Most of those errors involve not understanding a rule, an interaction, or the game state. This has nothing to do with that, it's just one player trying to gain advantage of another just by using language and an ambiguous situation that it's in the end very clear. That player knows very well what card his opponent is referring to (and trying to convince a judge otherwise is a risky path, I'd say).
There are plenty of technical errors that can be made where the correct ruling is to say “you misunderstood something and now you've misplayed, sorry but carry on” What makes this any different?
Originally posted by David Jimenez III:That's a fair question, although the situation that leads to it is a bit contrived and unusual.
I really just wanted to know whether a change in game state occurring between the time a spell or ability is announced but before it is paid for would allow the ability to continue resolving or if the fact that it was legal when announced would override
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