Originally posted by Adam Zakreski:
However, the paths aren't equal. The downgrade is the exception, and only opens if specific criteria are met. The circumstances here are pretty darn close, but close doesn't cut it.
Simply put, Amanda made a Game Play Error and earns a Game Loss.
Agreed; under current policy, this is a fairly cut and dry DEC GL.
However, I think Mark has a fairly solid point that this feels a
lot like a “leave my main phase” linguistic trick, and I think the logic behind disallowing those tricks also applies here.
We don't allow players to bypass the “Combat?” shortcut through clever wording because doing so effectively negates the shortcut entirely–if we did, players would start using the clever wording all the time, and then we're right back with the problem the shortcut was intended to solve. If we allow people to use clever wording to bypass DEC's confirmation exception, then we're in the same boat. Allow the bypass, and all of a sudden the exception is useless because nobody will ever confirm their opponent's draw–why would they? They'll just confirm the resolution of whatever spell or ability is causing the card draw.
So yes, under current policy this is a GL, but I think it's worth a good long look by the HLJs to see if we really want it to be this easy to bypass the confirmation exception.