Originally posted by Hao Du:
I'm discussing a new judge article about Outside Assistance with my fellow judge and I'm thinking about the border line of TE-OA and UC-Cheating.
As defined:
IPG3.2: Tournament Error - Outside Assistance … A player … Seeks play advice or hidden information about his or her match from others once he or she has sat for his or her match.
IPG4.8: Unsporting Conduct - Cheating … the offense must meet the following criteria for it to be considered Cheating:
• The player must be attempting to gain advantage from his or her action.
• The player must be aware that he or she is doing something illegal.
So consider the following situation. (All of these situations happen in PTQs and you are the head judge.)
1) Adam was playing a match and the thing didn't go well for him. He desperately asked a spectator: “Which creature should I block that I could get out of the situation?” His opponent called a judge. After a simple investigation, you found out that Adam had well knowledge of the IPG, and he knew that seeking play advice is illegal.
Is it OA or Cheating?
2) Arnold and Steven went to a PTQ together. Steven finished his match quickly and he went to Arnold's table to watch him playing. Soon, Steven saw a bad play of Arnold's and quickly informed Arnold of it. Before Arnold could make his next play, his opponent calls a judge. During the investigation afterwards, you found that Arnold and Steven were friends, and they were well aware that giving/seeking play advice is illegal, and Steven was giving play advice intentionally.
Is it OA or Cheating for Steven? Steven actually did not gain any advantage for telling Arnold of his bad play, so it sounds failing Cheating's first criteria, but it's still a blatant violation of the rule.
For Arnold, did he commit any infraction for knowing Steven is trying to help him and not calling a judge himself? What if they had an agreement that they will ‘help’ each other in case the other is in trouble?
Thank you.
Regards,
Du Hao
Originally posted by Michael Shiver:
Every in-game infraction other than Cheating assumes the player isn't aware the action is illegal. Being aware of the illegality and doing it anyway to gain advantage is always Cheating, regardless of whatever other infraction category it could fit into. Otherwise, what's to discourage a scummy player from just going for as many GRV-level infractions he can get away with before the accumulated Warnings put him in the danger zone?
Example 2 is just OA for Steven, since he isn't gaining any advantage for himself. If the investigation also reveals that Arnold and Steven had some kind of agreement to help each other then it's Cheating for Arnold since he solicited OA while knowing it was illegal. If there was no agreement/solicitation, then nothing for Arnold.
Edited Joaquín Pérez (Feb. 11, 2014 09:30:35 AM)
Originally posted by Michael Shiver:
Originally posted by Nicholas Brown:
OA is a form of cheating.
Hao DuUsually, this will be UC-Cheating, as it fulfills the criteria for Outside Assistance, the player tries to gain an advantage and he is aware his action is illegal, so unless the situation he referred to was already over when asking the spectator or he somehow forgot Outside Assistance is illegal for a second, he will be disqualified from the event.
1) Adam was playing a match and the thing didn't go well for him. He desperately asked a spectator: “Which creature should I block that I could get out of the situation?” His opponent called a judge. After a simple investigation, you found out that Adam had well knowledge of the IPG, and he knew that seeking play advice is illegal.
Is it OA or Cheating?
Hao Du
2) Arnold and Steven went to a PTQ together. Steven finished his match quickly and he went to Arnold's table to watch him playing. Soon, Steven saw a bad play of Arnold's and quickly informed Arnold of it. Before Arnold could make his next play, his opponent calls a judge. During the investigation afterwards, you found that Arnold and Steven were friends, and they were well aware that giving/seeking play advice is illegal, and Steven was giving play advice intentionally.
Is it OA or Cheating for Steven? Steven actually did not gain any advantage for telling Arnold of his bad play, so it sounds failing Cheating's first criteria, but it's still a blatant violation of the rule.
For Arnold, did he commit any infraction for knowing Steven is trying to help him and not calling a judge himself? What if they had an agreement that they will ‘help’ each other in case the other is in trouble?
Edited Sebastian Stückl (Feb. 11, 2014 11:39:09 AM)
Originally posted by Joaquín Pérez:
In first case, he has both awareness that his action is illegal, and clearly tried to get some advantage from it. Cheating..
Originally posted by Sebastian Stückl:
Usually, this will be USC-Cheating, as it fulfills the criteria for Outside Assistance, the player tries to gain an advantage and he is aware his action is illegal, so unless the situation he referred to was already over when asking the spectator or he somehow forgot Outside Assistance is illegal for a second, he will be disqualified from the event.
Originally posted by Philip Körte:Sebastian Stückl
Usually, this will be USC-Cheating, as it fulfills the criteria for Outside Assistance, the player tries to gain an advantage and he is aware his action is illegal, so unless the situation he referred to was already over when asking the spectator or he somehow forgot Outside Assistance is illegal for a second, he will be disqualified from the event.
Just wanted to point out that this does not stop the question from beeing OA. Even if the situation has already passed, gamestates are/might be recurring, and asking an outsider during a match ‘Say you have the following situation, how would you block?’ most certainly is OA - and is basically exactly what you are asking/saying when you tell a player on how he should've blocked last combat.
Sebastian probably didn't want to imply that the bolded part stops it beeing OA, I just want to prevent missunderstandings.
Besides that, I fully agree with Sebastian here.
Edited Sebastian Stückl (Feb. 11, 2014 11:37:09 AM)
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