Edited Bradley Morin (April 30, 2014 10:52:18 AM)
Originally posted by Niki Lin:
Why do we allow a player who uses a Doomblade on a black creature to untap and take it back from the stack into his hand? The cast went alright up until the point he indicated an illegal target, right?
The only real difference that I could see is that we see a cast as “one action” (speculation of my part?). Can anybody explain me what the difference is in backing up these two scenarios were something went wrong “halfway”.
Originally posted by Darrin Sisneros:You have to back up some because the player announced an illegal target (Grizzly Bears)when taking control of the Divine Verdict. The argument is regarding how far the rewind is supposed to go.
Question: Does backing up even matter? Since they switched control of the creatures, wouldn't Perplexing Chimera cease to be an attacking or blocking creature? In that case, wouldn't the spell fail due to an illegal target anyway? I am taking for granted that only Perplexing Chimera attacked and no creatures blocked since it was the only creature mentioned for that combat phase. With no other legal targets, the target would remain Chimera and the spell would fail since it has a now illegal target.
Could we not simply explain that and let them move on with the game?
Edited Alan Dreher (May 1, 2014 02:36:15 AM)
Originally posted by Sam Sherman:Yes, you are right. Still, the changing of the target is separate from exchanging control.
alan, AP doesn't choose whether to exchange control or not with the
chimera's ability until that ability starts resolving.
717.1. If a player realizes that he or she can’t legally take an action after starting to do so, the entire
action is reversed and any payments already made are canceled. No abilities trigger and no effects
apply as a result of an undone action. If the action was casting a spell, the spell returns to the zone it
came from. The player may also reverse any legal mana abilities activated while making the illegal
play, unless mana from them or from any triggered mana abilities they triggered was spent on
another mana ability that wasn’t reversed. Players may not reverse actions that moved cards to a
library, moved cards from a library to any zone other than the stack, or caused a library to be
shuffled.
judge may get permission from the Head Judge to back up the game to the point of the error. Each action taken is undone until the game reaches the point immediately prior to the error
Originally posted by David Záleský:I see what you are getting at, but presented like this I think you can back up to step 2 instead of step 1 without problems. Step 1 was just tapping lands to float mana; not an illegal action. It's different if the player tapped those lands for mana during the casting of the Doom Blade. I could be convinced that this is just out-of-order sequencing, though, since the player obviously tapped the lands to pay for the Doom Blade (and many players have been raised on stories of people losing the Pro Tour finals for announcing spells without first tapping mana).
These are the actions taken while illegally casting Doom Blade:
1. Tap to lands to get mana.
2. Announce Doom Blade
3. Target creature with hexproof. <– Illegal action
4. Remove mana from mana pool in order to pay for Doom Blade
304.2. When an instant spell resolves, the actions stated in its
rules text are followed. Then it’s put into
its owner’s graveyard.
I see what you are getting at, but presented like this I think you can back up to step 2 instead of step 1 without problems. Step 1 was just tapping lands to float mana; not an illegal action. It's different if the player tapped those lands for mana during the casting of the Doom Blade.
Edited Auzmyn Oberweger (May 1, 2014 07:00:58 AM)
Originally posted by Jochem van 't Hull:David ZáleskýI see what you are getting at, but presented like this I think you can back up to step 2 instead of step 1 without problems. Step 1 was just tapping lands to float mana; not an illegal action. It's different if the player tapped those lands for mana during the casting of the Doom Blade. I could be convinced that this is just out-of-order sequencing, though, since the player obviously tapped the lands to pay for the Doom Blade (and many players have been raised on stories of people losing the Pro Tour finals for announcing spells without first tapping mana).
These are the actions taken while illegally casting Doom Blade:
1. Tap to lands to get mana.
2. Announce Doom Blade
3. Target creature with hexproof. <– Illegal action
4. Remove mana from mana pool in order to pay for Doom Blade
But what constitutes an “action”? MCR 717.1 names “casting a spell” as an example of an illegal action, not “choosing targets”. It seems intuitive to me that in the Perplexing Chimera scenario, “resolving a trigger” is the action, and the trigger as a whole includes both exchanging control and changing the target.
In what other cases do you back up only part of the resolution of a spell or ability? Suppose I'm at 1 life and cast Arc Trail targeting the only creature on the battlefield; your Bear Cub (for 2), and you (for 1). Then you point to your Leyline of Sanctity. Targeting the Bear Cub was legal, so do we now back up to the point where I am forced to kill myself?
601.2.
If, at any point during the casting of a spell, a player is unable to comply with any of the steps listed below, the casting of the spell is illegal; the game returns to the moment before that spell started to be cast (see rule 717, “Handling Illegal Actions”). Announcements and payments can’t be altered after they’ve been made.
Edited Toby Hazes (May 1, 2014 08:24:51 AM)
Originally posted by Alan Dreher:Darrin SisnerosYou have to back up some because the player announced an illegal target (Grizzly Bears)when taking control of the Divine Verdict. The argument is regarding how far the rewind is supposed to go.
Question: Does backing up even matter? Since they switched control of the creatures, wouldn't Perplexing Chimera cease to be an attacking or blocking creature? In that case, wouldn't the spell fail due to an illegal target anyway? I am taking for granted that only Perplexing Chimera attacked and no creatures blocked since it was the only creature mentioned for that combat phase. With no other legal targets, the target would remain Chimera and the spell would fail since it has a now illegal target.
Could we not simply explain that and let them move on with the game?
I think the key for this is that exchanging control is legal, changing the target to Grizzly Bears is not but the ability doesn't require you to change targets. This isn't like casting a spell or activating an ability with an illegal target where the entire spell/ability on the stack is illegal. The Perplexing Chimera trigger is totally legal, you just cannot choose to retarget the spell once you have gained control of it since there are no legal targets(this happens as a separate action). Think of it like a player casting Redirect. They don't announce the new targets until Redirect has resolved. The way the entire sequence actually is supposed to play out(if everything is done exactly as the rules define) is:
1. NAP casts Divine Verdict
2. Perplexing Chimera triggers. This goes on the stack.
3. NAP has no response. Perplexing Chimera trigger resolves.
4. AP chooses to exchange control. NAP gains control of Perplexing Chimera. AP gains control of Divine Verdict.
5. AP attempts to change the target of Divine Verdict, naming Grizzly Bears.
The violation occurs in #5. We only back up to #5.. Everything else has already resolved and is legal.