Originally posted by Chris Nowak:
It may be my newbishness to judging and to the Legacy format as well, but when there's that much room for squishiness and when the words all have very well defined meanings within magic, I default to “follow the written rules”. Unless I can pretty clearly tell if one player is trying to shark another.
<legacyplayerhat> I agree with this, to an extent. “Fish” is, indeed, a commonly used slang for Merfolk, which most Legacy players are used to. That said, it's also a very legal creature type to name with Cavern. If AP called “Fish”, meaning the slang for “Merfolk”, AP had better be darned sure NAP is willing to play along. If NAP plays along, I'm not going to step in and say “Hey guys, Fish means Fish”. Likewise, if this is game 2 and in game 1 AP also called “Fish” and NAP played along and now NAP is trying to “gotcha” AP into a losing situation, that's also not kosher.
What is kosher, however, is that some people weren't born playing Legacy and don't know that “Fish” means “Merfolk”. If NAP is one of these players (or is trying to “gotcha” AP into a bad play; I think the distinction is not entirely black-and-white, so I'm willing to accept either case), I'm willing to accept his claim that AP should be more clear in their plays, because, really, that's why we have Communication Policy.
In summary: If AP calls “Fish” and NAP plays along, that's fine. If it causes a problem, the onus is on AP to follow communication policy properly. </legacyplayerhat>