Originally posted by IPG 2.5:The way you described the scenario, not much else has happened - and I think a lot of judges would be comfortable backing up to the point of the error - but that's really something you have to determine based on each unique set of circumstances.
In a situation where the effect that caused the infraction is controlled by one player, but the illegal action is taken by
another player, both receive a Game Play Error – Game Rule Violation.
If a player fails to announce a life total change, we educate them (it's not an infraction).That's a complete statement, and it applies only to a player not announcing a life total change - nothing more.
Originally posted by Pawel Kazimierczuk:Nope, that's different; if I gained or lost an incorrect amount of life, then it's a GRV for me. The fact that I also didn't announce my life total change is not an (additional) infraction. And if you wrote down the correct life total, I didn't announce my incorrect change, and you pointed out my mistake as soon as you noticed it - no infraction for you.
I write down correct life total from Devour Flesh, you don't. You don't announce your life total change. We find out about discrepency later and call a judge. Update life totals, no infraction?
Originally posted by Pawel Kazimierczuk:This sounds more like the original scenario; one player commits a GPE-GRV (wrong life total change) because of another player's effect (Devour Flesh). And yes, the phrasing in the IPG that I've quoted matches that scenario, so we assess a GRV for both players. Whether or not we back up is not relevant to the GRVs, so I'll ignore that; similarly, announcing the life total change, or not, doesn't change the fact that an infraction occurred, and both players were involved.
I write down incorrect life total from Devour Flesh and so do you. You don't announce … Double GRV, full backup or no change?
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