DEC Penalty Gamesmanship
Here's a situation in a ~50 player 5-round T8 Competitive event. There's a lot going on to think about. It would be great to hear how people would handle the investigation and rulings.
In G2 of a Legacy match, Alvin is playing an UG Elves/Food Chain deck. He has three Nettle Sentinels and a Heritage Druid in play, has resolved two Glimpse of Natures this turn and is well on his way to drawing his deck. Alvin has been announcing all his plays and triggers and mana and is playing quickly.
His opponent Norbert won G1 playing a Prison deck. Norbert has Torpor Orb, Ensnaring Bridge and Bottled Cloister in play (locking out Alvin's attacks). His hand is exiled under the Cloister. Norbert has said nothing but “sure, yes, yeah, okay” for the past several minutes and is visibly and audibly exasperated as he waits to see whether Alvin has a way to get out of the lock.
At some point, Alvin plays Elvish Visionary, announcing "Visionary, 5 floating, untap , draw three.“ The following event lead to Norbert calling for a judge.
Alvin's description of what happened next was: ”I announced my draw, and Norbert just sat there looking disgusted at me as if he'd lost his will to speak. After a couple awkward seconds, I figured he just wanted me to get on with it.“
Norbert's description was: ”I gave him a quizzical look to indicate that something was wrong. I was going to point out the Torpor Orb, but I gave Alvin a second to figure it out for himself. When he went to draw cards, they were in his hand before I could stop him.“
Questioning both players separately yields the following information:
Both agree that Norbert had audibly confirmed all of the previous card draws. They also agree that it was 3-5 seconds between Alvin announcing his draw triggers, and him swiping three cards off of the deck.
Alvin concedes that his ”draw three“ motion was swift enough that Norbert *might* not have had time to intervene once he started it. However, he is completely convinced that Norbert tried to engineer a GL against him by encouraging the card draw without actually confirming it.
Having overheard Alvin's accusation from across the room, Norbert immediately volunteers a case that he wasn't trying to mislead Alvin into a DEC penalty. He was pretty sure that all of Alvin's answers to Bridge/Cloister were shut off by Torpor Orb, and he had nothing to gain by Alvin being GL'd. His largely silent response to the ”draw three“ announcement was mostly due to the extreme annoyance he had with Alvin playing on with no outs and ”saying dumb catchphrases whenever he cast Glimpse of Nature.“
While Norbert's argument seems to be one contrived after-the-fact, and he does seem a bit weaselly, there's nothing inconsistent with his mindstate being ”I'm going to stare at my opponent, and he will figure it out.“ He was clearly honest in his belief that all of this was Alvin's fault. Norbert seems close enough to having a full-blown panic attack that further questioning is inadvisable.
While discussing the situation with another judge who was playing but had completed his match early, Norbert approaches on the verge of tears. He pleads that ”If you're even thinking about giving me a DQ, you should check Alvin's decklist to see if he even had outs. I… it's probably not the case… but he might have set me up on purpose.“
These are the some of the things I'm thinking about:
* Does a few seconds of silence count as ”confirmation from … opponent“ for the purposes of IPG 2.3?
* If the existence of a card draw trigger on the stack is free information, ”Players must answer completely and honestly any specific questions pertaining to free information“ should compel Norbert. But does the lack of an immediate response constitute a TE-PCV?
* Can non-verbally intimidating opponents to discourage them from seeking free information constitute a USC penalty?
* What would have been the best questions to ask Norbert?
* If Norbert openly admitted to trying to engineer a GL for DEC, but didn't commit TE-PCV, would that even be USC-Cheating? Or would it be legal?
* Should DQ investigations ever be cut short for customer service purposes because of someone's emotional state?
* Alvin already knows if he's going to win or lose this game, based on the contents of his deck. If it seemed plausible that Alvin masterminded this entire brouhaha to get Norbert DQ'd (to be clear, it doesn't), would it be reasonable to check Alvin's library to determine whether he was going to win, or if judge intervention was his only out?
* What's the best way to phrase the request ”Try not to be openly disdainful toward your opponent?"