Another completely different reason why I don't want to handle this with a dire approach is that I think it's more benign than other well established “less than sporting, but legal” player activities.
"What does that foreign Vampire Nighthawk do?“ ”Oh it's a 2/3 flying lifelink“ (specifically omitting ‘deathtouch’).
”Judge: my opponent has only 5 lands, can I flash in Pestermite in response to his Pact of Negation trigger and tap down a land before he has a chance to pay the mana?“ (specifically phrased in such a way to elicit a ‘yes’, hoping to mislead the opponent on what the judge was really saying)
Originally posted by Matt Sauers:
It's a total dick move. I can't find a rule against it.
I might choose to notify the player that it's because of plays like that that folks like me avoid playing Magic at public venues.
Edited Toby Hazes (June 11, 2014 02:49:24 PM)
Edited Lyle Waldman (June 11, 2014 01:13:16 PM)
Originally posted by René Oberweger:
To be honest i'm a worried about the outcome if we dont step in and at least educate the player about his behaviour. What if the idea of bluffing like this spread over the local community, leaving its marks on other players? Maybe they think to themself “Oh, this is some way to gain an advantage and nothing bad happens to him, so why not doing it myself?”.
Originally posted by Joshua Feingold:
There is a big difference between penalizing the player and holding him to his declared action.
If a player at 3 life casts Lightning Bolt at a Boros Reckoner, then realizes his mistakes and tries to take it back, are you penalizing him by holding him to his declared action? Not a chance.
Likewise, this player made a very clear statement about a concession (contingent upon a legally accessible part of the game for his opponent). You are just holding him to that declared action.
Originally posted by Toby Hazes:
But how compares this to bluffing about future actions?
“If you don’t chump this you're dead”
Originally posted by Benjamin Klein:This really does a good job of explaining my thoughts on this. (I guess I need an ‘O’ Like button? heh)
(a whole bunch of good stuff, and…) “Show me a counterspell” = offer; revealing cancel from hand = acceptance. This contract is valid and Adam can be held to it.
Edited Riki Hayashi (June 12, 2014 03:51:28 PM)