Edited Colleen Nelson (Sept. 10, 2013 03:20:18 AM)
Originally posted by Colleen Nelson:Nope. If your opponent is revealing information, you don't have to tell them or look the other way.
“watching our opponent as he shuffles with his deck tilted toward us so we can see all the cards in his deck” to be ok - seeing your opponent's deck in this way accidentally is LEC, seeing it intentionally is Cheating
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
At US Nationals several years ago, “John Doe” - then L3 - was playing; I was Head Judge. On day 2, he received a Warning that, had the floor judge asked the proper question (“have you had any Warnings before during this event?”), would have been upgraded to a Game Loss. John Doe said nothing - and then his conscience drove him nuts. He came and talked to me and Andy Heckt, and we agreed that he had no obligation - per policy! - to remind the floor judge of his duties. (I also quickly reminded all the judges to ask that question!)
So, “official” answer, if you will: you do NOT have to appeal an incorrect ruling.
When I play, I almost always appeal - whether the floor judge is right or not - because I want to see how the floor judge and the Head Judge handle that. I have to admit, it's kind of fun to watch an L2 squirm a bit when I tell them “you better get the HJ, I just earned a Game Loss here…” :)
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