Edited Olivier Jansen (April 15, 2016 09:44:41 AM)
Originally posted by Olivier Jansen:
Why wouldn't you consider L@EC here?
IPG 2.2
Players are considered to have looked at a card when they have been able to observe the face of a hidden card, or when a card is moved any significant amount from a deck, but before it touches cards in another set. A set is a physically distinct group defined by a game rule or effect. It may correspond to a specific zone, or may only represent a part of a zone. This includes errors of dexterity or catching a play error before the card is placed into his or her hand.
Originally posted by Adam Eidelsafy:Olivier Jansen
Why wouldn't you consider L@EC here?
I wouldn't consider LEC because of the following passage.IPG 2.2
Players are considered to have looked at a card when they have been able to observe the face of a hidden card, or when a card is moved any significant amount from a deck, but before it touches cards in another set. A set is a physically distinct group defined by a game rule or effect. It may correspond to a specific zone, or may only represent a part of a zone. This includes errors of dexterity or catching a play error before the card is placed into his or her hand.
Once they Scried 2, I believe the extra card has joined the distinct set of the one card they were supposed to be looking at.
Originally posted by Olivier Jansen:
Got it, found the relevant passage from the IPG: “B. A player scries two cards when he should only have scried one” - under HCE. At this point, I'm strongly considering HCE.
CR 103.4
Each player draws a number of cards equal to his or her starting hand size, which is normally seven. (Some effects can modify a player's starting hand size.) A player who is dissatisfied with his or her initial hand may take a mulligan. First, the starting player declares whether or not he or she will take a mulligan. Then each other player in turn order does the same. Once each player has made a declaration, all players who decided to take mulligans do so at the same time. To take a mulligan, a player shuffles his or her hand back into his or her library, then draws a new hand of one fewer cards than he or she had before. If a player kept his or her hand of cards, those cards become the player's opening hand, and that player may not take any further mulligans. This process is then repeated until no player takes a mulligan. (Note that if a player's hand size reaches zero cards, that player must keep that hand.) After all players have kept an opening hand, each player in turn order whose hand contains fewer cards than that player's starting hand size may look at the top card of his or her library. If a player does, that player may put that card on the bottom of his or her library.
Edited Charles Featherer (April 14, 2016 11:41:22 AM)
Edited Charles Featherer (April 14, 2016 12:09:59 PM)
Edited Johannes Wagner (April 14, 2016 12:25:23 PM)
Originally posted by Shawn Doherty:
I guess that would also be MPE if they kept a 7-card hand then scryed for
1. Yes?
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