Edited Jack Doyle (Feb. 13, 2014 09:20:52 AM)
Originally posted by Chris Nowak:
Lets say you were convinced the player really had no idea… (It would be very suprising, but it wouldn't completely shock me), how would you handle that?
If you can't reconstruct their pool, it's not really fair to leave them in the tournament.
Do you have them drop from the tournament and let them know this would normally be a DQ for Cheating, but you're helping out because they didn't know? (ie, kick'em out but make them happy about it)
I heard of a TO in a somewhat similar scenario decide to let them continue playing, but recorded them as a 0-2 for every match regardless of outcome. They got to continue playing but didn't end up gaining an advantage. (Though for this scenario, I suspect he'd have them take the wrong-set cards out at least)
Originally posted by James Winward-Stuart:
What if there was no intent, but the deck is unfixable?
For example, because the player has built from a giant pool consisting of everything he opened at this prerelease and everything he opened in the one he played in a few hours ago (this example has actually happened). You can cut down to the correct number of cards of each type, but there's no way to know what came from where.
Edited Donato Del Giudice (Feb. 15, 2014 08:57:46 AM)
Originally posted by James Winward-Stuart:
What if there was no intent, but the deck is unfixable?
For example, because the player has built from a giant pool consisting of everything he opened at this prerelease and everything he opened in the one he played in a few hours ago (this example has actually happened). You can cut down to the correct number of cards of each type, but there's no way to know what came from where.
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