Originally posted by Aric Parkinson:
Does “Bounce it?” necessarily mean that Natalie was asking for oracle text? Furthermore, is answering “yes” to that question necessarily false?
Originally posted by Matt Farney:No, you can't use a remedy for something that isn't being issued as a penalty. In the end you are attempting a partial fix (even though there is no remedy for a DEC at competitive REL because it is a straight up game loss.).
If a CPV or GPE prevents a penalty from being issued for Drawing Extra Cards, do we still need to perform the DEC remedy?
Originally posted by Aric Parkinson:
Does “Bounce it?” necessarily mean thatNatalieAnton was asking for oracle text? Furthermore, is answering “yes” to that question necessarily false?
Originally posted by Gareth Tanner:The question is rather clear and unambiguous to me, and to vast majority of the players it is unambiguous also. I can imagine that some new players (or non-English-speakers) simply don't know what “bounce” means. However, I can hardly imagine a player that could know that term, but think that “bounce” = “put-this-card-to-top-of-your-library”.
Is “Bounce it?” a unambiguous term?
Originally posted by Nathanaël François:I have a question here. We can assume that no CPV occured and that communication was legal (although I personally would not do that, as I already said, as I'm on CPV side here).
Therefore I'm with the people who would just give a Warning for GRV to both players, as Natalie's spell was incorrectly resolved and Anton put a card he owned in the wrong zone.
Edited Alex Zhed (Oct. 18, 2013 10:07:08 PM)
Originally posted by Nathaniel Lawrence:
So the first point of error then is when Anton puts Aurelia back in his hand, instead of on top of his library; a clear GRV. Natalie fails to prevent this error, and since she controlled the effect which resulted in the GRV, she also receives a GRV.
Originally posted by Alex Zhed:
Yet again I ask why do you think it's a clear GRV.
A player illegally puts one or more cards into his or her hand, and that's clearly a DEC definition. Specifically, one of DEC examples states “A player puts a creature with lethal damage on it into her hand instead of her graveyard”. If a player would exile a creature with lethal damage on it instead of putting it into his/her graveyard, it's GRV. If he puts it in his hand, it's DEC. Here a player puts a card into his hand instead of putting it on top of his library. So, why it's a GRV, and not DEC?
Originally posted by Alex Zhed:
GRV, by definition, handles violations of the Comprehensive Rules that are not covered by the other Game Play Errors.
Yet, DEC has this definition: A player illegally puts one or more cards into his or her hand and, at the moment before he or she began the instruction or action that put a card into his or her hand, no other Game Play Error or Player Communication Violation had been committed, and the error was not the result of resolving objects on the stack in an incorrect order.
Edited Abraham Corson (Oct. 18, 2013 10:42:27 PM)
Originally posted by Alex Zhed:
A player illegally puts one or more cards into his or her hand, and that's clearly a DEC definition. Specifically, one of DEC examples states “A player puts a creature with lethal damage on it into her hand instead of her graveyard”. If a player would exile a creature with lethal damage on it instead of putting it into his/her graveyard, it's GRV. If he puts it in his hand, it's DEC. Here a player puts a card into his hand instead of putting it on top of his library. So, why it's a GRV, and not DEC?
Edited Eric Paré (Oct. 18, 2013 10:50:31 PM)
Originally posted by Alex Zhed:
However, could you explain to me, if we anyway go this route, why do you think we have GRV and not DEC?
GRV, by definition, handles violations of the Comprehensive Rules that are not covered by the other Game Play Errors.
Yet, DEC has this definition: A player illegally puts one or more cards into his or her hand and, at the moment before he or she began the instruction or action that put a card into his or her hand, no other Game Play Error or Player Communication Violation had been committed, and the error was not the result of resolving objects on the stack in an incorrect order.
At the moment before Anton put his Aurelia into his hand, as you state, no other GPE or CPV had been committed. So, as far as I understand the defininition, it's a clear by-the-book case of DEC. And we either issue Anton a GL if we think that his action was too disruptive (omg), or put Aurelia in correct zone + degrade penalty to Warning, because card's identity is known to both players. And issue GPE-GtMGS for Natalie for not noticing that at the moment of error (?).
IPG 2.3
D. A player puts a creature with lethal damage on it into her hand instead of her graveyard.
IPG 2.3
If the player received confirmation from his or her opponent before drawing the card (including confirming the number of cards when greater than one), the infraction is not Drawing Extra Cards.
Edited John Brian McCarthy (Oct. 18, 2013 10:57:39 PM)