(I'm told Rules Committee might already have ahold of this)
Here's the Scenario: Player A attacks Player B with a 4/4 and a 7/7. Player B blocks the 7/7 (quite safely, and barely relevant) with
Gisela, Blade of Goldnight and doesn't block the 4/4. Player B, thinking of the unblocked 4/4 casts
Eye for an Eye. Now Player B has two replacement effects to order and chooses to apply the Eye for an Eye before the Gisela cuts the damage in half. He says “I'll take 2, you take 8.”
Player A responds, “No, when they changed the text of Eye for an Eye and took away ‘If another spell or effect reduces the amount of damage you receive, it does not reduce the damage dealt by Eye for an Eye.’ …we now keep looking at what ‘that much damage’ is equal to. I only take your same 2, which Gisela doubles to 4.”
Player B is of the opinion that the text was eliminated simply because it was redundant. That Eye for an Eye works the same way it always did. Since the replacement effect has been applied, setting up a second damage effect with a separate source, we're done looking at the value of the damage at that time.
When I *am* player B, it feels like I'm playing-it-safe to agree with player A, considering the spirit of the card. (it behaves as though ordering my replacements didn't matter). If I get called to a table to rule in favor of player A, that goes beyond playing-it-safe to the tune of an incorrect ruling, hence this cry-for-help. Is
Eye for an Eye truely neutered under current Oracle?