Originally posted by Sean Hunt:
This issue has already been discussed and resolved in another context, and with more pun to boot. Hasty play should not lead to a DEC; it's a GRV for playing too fast.
Originally posted by Lyle Waldman:You are actually agreeing with me. What you are saying is that it is typical for a player to be vigilant and take pre-emptive action when we wants to disrupt the normal flow of the game.
In general, if a player wants to cast a spell in his opponent's upkeep, he (or at least I, and most of the people I've played against) will say something like “go, I have effects on your upkeep”, or, the instant the opponent goes to untap his cards, says “wait, I have effects in your upkeep”.
Originally posted by Lyle Waldman:While the draw itself does not use the stack, there are priority passes that have been skipped during the upkeep that technically exist but are often skipped when they aren't expected to matter. Likewise, it is very rare in standard for an opponent to respond to an Erebos activation, so the priority passes that technically exist are often skipped because they aren't expected to matter. (Erebos decks don't often run counterspells, so the value in responding to the ability is generally quite small compared to waiting for potential extra information revealed by playing the card or activating Erebos again.)
1) The draw step draw does not use the stack. Therefore it is more reasonable to not expect responses to that.
Originally posted by Lyle Waldman:This shortcut does not actually exist.
I believe it is a shortcut (although I don't havea quote for this) to shortcut through the upkeep unless there's an upkeep trigger or a player specifically requests priority.
Justin TurnerI think this is a somewhat dangerous line of logic, since perceptions of what constitutes jumping the gun may vary significantly between players. And the same player may even feel identical objectively measured periods of time are jumping the gun when he is thinking about a response and a perfectly reasonable pause for response when he has nothing to do.
It seems like both players agree that Adam jumped the gun here. When you jump the gun and draw cards that you aren't supposed to draw, that's DEC, at least in my opinion.
Originally posted by Joshua Feingold:
I think this is a somewhat dangerous line of logic, since perceptions of what constitutes jumping the gun may vary significantly between players. And the same player may even feel identical objectively measured periods of time are jumping the gun when he is thinking about a response and a perfectly reasonable pause for response when he has nothing to do.
Originally posted by Sean Hunt:
This issue has already been discussed and resolved in another context, and with more pun to boot. Hasty play should not lead to a DEC; it's a GRV for playing too fast.
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