Edited Andrea Mondani (April 30, 2014 02:43:27 AM)
Originally posted by Andrea Mondani:
Adam provided wrong derived informations here.
Originally posted by Gareth Tanner:
Question to all: what CPV or GRV is there here?
Edited Andrea Mondani (April 30, 2014 02:55:12 AM)
Originally posted by Andrea Mondani:
“This is now a copy of my Heroes' Bane until end of turn, do you take 8?”
Since Nate cannot take 8 just because and he's only unblocked creature is a copy of an 8/8 (sadly for the copy that's a 0/0 with 8 counters) one can start asking “what was that 8 in your sentence?”.
He either believe he has an 8/8 (and would say so) or trying to convey that message (and would say so). Either way, he was misrepresenting derived informations. Worst case he was just cheating knowing he can't do this. Best case he thinks he can (but still cannot). Or he just doesn't have a clue, wich is fine and a GRV would be added.
(edit for grammar)
Edited Eric Shukan (April 30, 2014 04:48:20 AM)
Originally posted by Eric Shukan:
Now, if anyone wants to back up the concession and talk about CPV or cheating or other errors, those are great talks. But the scenario is 100% clear that there was a concession.
Edited Stefano Ferrari (April 30, 2014 06:10:20 AM)
Originally posted by Andrea Mondani:
Then my second question would be addressed to Nate: “were you going to concede due to that supposedly 8/8 doing 8 damage?” (remember they didn't scoop, he just offered an handshake that's not “finalized” yet).
Originally posted by Darren Horve:Many players decline the handshake, for whatever reasons; does that mean they can't concede?
the fact is that a handshake closes a deal
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:Darren HorveMany players decline the handshake, for whatever reasons; does that mean they can't concede?
the fact is that a handshake closes a deal
Edited Darren Horve (April 30, 2014 11:14:36 AM)
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
If Adam really presented it in such a carefully-worded manner - “Do you take 8?” - then he clearly wasn't making a statement about derived information
Originally posted by Maykel .:
why is that not considered as stating a false derived information?
“Do you take 8?” is inferring that he's dealing 8 damage, which is a wrong derived information.
Is it because the sentence didn't state explicitly about “damage” or “combat damage”, so 8 could be anything.. Thus it's not considered a statement about derived information??
Originally posted by Brian Schenck:This guy is smart!
Sometimes “Do you take 8?” is a valid statement. Other times it won't be. Understanding the context in which the statement is presented is the important underlying takeaway, in my opinion
Edited Bret Siakel (May 19, 2014 03:12:10 PM)