Originally posted by Adam Kolipiński:
I can see it two ways:
1. the error was that player failed to discard a card. then we get Uncle answer.
2. The error was moving card from one hidden location (face down card next to graveyard) to other hidden location (hand). Which should be seen as a HCE, with appropriate fix.
Why we should rule rather 1. than 2.?
Originally posted by Joshua Feingold:But if I scry two cards instead of one, these cards are still in my library. But the infraction is HCE. What's difference here?
“Location” here refers not to a physical position, but to something the
game understands as a location.
“Face down next to the graveyard” isn't a game location. This sentence sees
that card as still being in the player's hand if it hasn't yet gone to the
graveyard.
Bryan PrillamanBut the player didn't forget to discard a card. he did it, just after the dust settled discarded card end up back in his hand rather than graveyard.
Because it doesn't match the definition of HCE. Not discarding a card from your hand is a publicly visible and publicly correctable with publicly available information.
HCE is not a blanket that covers
Originally posted by Adam Kolipiński:No. He never completed the action of discarding:
player didn't forget to discard a card. he did it
CR 701.7a
To discard a card, move it from its owner’s hand to that player’s graveyard.
Originally posted by Adam Kolipiński:Example B of HCE makes it very clear what we do, if a player thinks he or she is supposed to Scry 2, when the effect is “Scry 1”.
But if I scry two cards instead of one, these cards are still in my library. But the infraction is HCE. What's difference here?
Bryan PrillamanI think I know where Bryan was heading, before he got cut off, and I'll put it my way: Not everything is HCE.
HCE is not a blanket that covers
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