Originally posted by Matt Farney:
Abel's actions while playing the Pain Seer's trigger ability qualifies as both LAEC and DEC. However, the GPE-Missed Triggers immediately preceded the illegal action, meeting the restriction on DEC, so the DEC penalty does not apply. This leaves only the LAEC penalty.
Callum Milne
The definition of DEC specifically states that it does not apply when a player commits a GPE before putting the card into their hand, and a player revealing the top card of their library for no reason is absolutely a GPE.
Originally posted by Aaron Huntsman:I said it was a Game Play Error, not a Game Rule Violation. DEC doesn't make any distinction between different kinds of GPE when laying out its exception, so I didn't specify what specific infraction it was, just the category.Callum Milne
The definition of DEC specifically states that it does not apply when a player commits a GPE before putting the card into their hand, and a player revealing the top card of their library for no reason is absolutely a GPE.
Why would it be a GRV and not L@EC?
Edited Philip Ockelmann (May 15, 2014 09:41:55 AM)
Originally posted by Callum Milne:
I said it was a Game Play Error, not a Game Rule Violation. DEC doesn't make any distinction between different kinds of GPE when laying out its exception, so I didn't specify what specific infraction it was, just the category.
Edited Martha Lufkin (May 15, 2014 02:41:13 PM)
Originally posted by Aaron Huntsman:Aaron Henner
I think Toby might be alluding to the discussion about DEC vs GRV.
I believe this lies firmly on the GRV side.
I believe he is alluding to the exact opposite, actually. What rule allowed Abel to reveal the Swamp? There isn't one. Abel saying “oops” and pointing to his Pain Seer does not suddenly put the ability on the stack - that Abel -thinks- he is resolving it is an error on his part, but does not constitute a GRV. Abel revealed a Swamp and then put it into his hand; that's a DEC.
Originally posted by Toby Elliott:
Also, the missing of the trigger is a red herring here. We make rulings (for the most part) based on what physically happens in the game, not why we think those things happened.
Originally posted by Toby Elliott:
Here's another way to think about it. Rewind back to the moment in time before that card hit his hand. At that moment, time stops and he never draws the card. Do you issue an infraction? If the answer is “yes”, then it's not DEC.
Edited Philip Ockelmann (May 15, 2014 03:58:21 PM)