Originally posted by Justin Miyashiro:
If upon investigation it is clear that the AP has made the
effort to be clear and the NAP has not, why are we opting not to reward
clarity? Possibly the NAP does not know when he should be casting his
Cryptic Command, but does that not fall under the superior rules knowledge
clause?
Edited Toby Hazes (Jan. 1, 2015 05:34:13 PM)
Edited Cyril Ford (Jan. 2, 2015 06:05:31 AM)
Originally posted by DJ Hirko:
I'm having a really hard time understanding most of these responses. The player is being explicitly and exactly clear on what he wants to do - pass priority until the beginning of combat step. It is not on the active player to ensure the non-active player plays in an optimal way, nor is it up to the judges. The active player is attempting a legal game action, why in the world would that be overridden?
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:And yet the discussion continues… please, listen to Uncle Scott, it's a simple ruling where we don't let a player win because of superior English skills, but where we let players agree on game actions.
Really, folks, it's not as difficult as you're making it seem…
cyril fordThis is a very dangerous precedent… “I personally don't care for D/DL problems, so I never hand out Game Losses for it” would be equally unacceptable. The shortcuts in the MTR are there for a very good reason, please don't ignore them.
Additionally, the ‘shortcut’ rule is very grey and loose. I personally don't care for it, as it is very easy to manipulate in a multitude of ways.
Originally posted by DJ Hirko:
I'm having a really hard time understanding most of these responses. The player is being explicitly and exactly clear on what he wants to do - pass priority until the beginning of combat step. It is not on the active player to ensure the non-active player plays in an optimal way, nor is it up to the judges. The active player is attempting a legal game action, why in the world would that be overridden?
cyril ford
Additionally, the 'shortcut' rule is very grey and loose. I personally don't care for it, as it is very easy to manipulate in a multitude of ways.
Dan Milavitz
AP has priority in main 1. He says “I wish to enter in my ‘Beginning of Combat Step’”. I can see no way to interpret this other than AP wanting to have priority in BOC, which means that the only time NAP can cast Cryptic is during main 1.
Eric Shukan
This happens maybe 0.1% of the time, though - I've seen it ONLY with those two players. So, that's why I said I'd investigate: to see if they had any prior agreement. You just never know unless you ask. Maybe you'd call these two players “corner cases”. I would, too, but I always ask about previous communications anyway. Never know what you might find.
James Dowling
I feel the important thing to do hear is find out whether AP had something to do in the Beginning of Combat Step. If there was a card that needed to be cast there, or an ability to be activated there, then I can 100% believe that they meant their statement to be “pass priority in main phase, keep it in BOC”.
You can't claim that they should say “cast this in BOC”, because this gives NAP information in the Main Phase that they're not entitled to, which may cause them to force a rewind to Main Phase to let them take an action that they shouldn't have had the information to take.
Dustin De LeeuwScott MarshallAnd yet the discussion continues… please, listen to Uncle Scott, it's a simple ruling where we don't let a player win because of superior English skills, but where we let players agree on game actions.
Really, folks, it's not as difficult as you're making it seem…
Edited Toby Hazes (Jan. 2, 2015 08:48:00 AM)
Just like with a silent Exalted trigger so you don't know how big your opponent's attacker is before you ask. Yes that's an unfortunate side effect of the way the rules are set up, but it's better than the alternative.
The same is true here. Yes if you want to cast something in your BoC the current way to do it is giving your opponent information they aren't entitled to, but that is an unfortunate side effect that's worth it.