Originally posted by Samuel Tremblay:
Norin said himself he expected her to draw. This clearly meets the criteria for a Unsuporting Conduct - Disqualifcation. Norin used his actions to gain an advantage (purposely let her draw so he can call a judge and have a free win) and he was also aware that the move Amanda would do was illegal, so what he's doing by letting her break the rules tells us that he knows he's doing something illegal too (letting a player violates the CR).
Originally posted by Samuel Tremblay:
Norin let her draw on purpose, probably knowing that she would get a GPE-DEC for doing so, even if both players confirm that he has only confirmed the trigger, not the draw. Norin said himself he expected her to draw. This clearly meets the criteria for a Unsuporting Conduct - Disqualifcation. Norin used his actions to gain an advantage (purposely let her draw so he can call a judge and have a free win) and he was also aware that the move Amanda would do was illegal, so what he's doing by letting her break the rules tells us that he knows he's doing something illegal too (letting a player violates the CR).
Edited Philip Böhm (March 18, 2014 02:47:14 AM)
Originally posted by Philip Böhm:Is it still true nowadays? This article you quoted was written in 2007… I see nothing in the four "rules govern player communication“ in the current MTR (§4.1) that would forbid Norin to say what he said. Moreover, he is not attempting to trick Amanda into making illegal plays (which would suppose she would not have made such an illegal play without Norin's ”trick", wouldn't it?), he is simply not preventing her from doing so by herself (am I hairsplitting?).
* Players may not use misleading statements to trick their opponent into making illegal plays.
from Player Communication Guide / Toby Elliott