Norin is aware that when the trigger resolves, it will do nothing per the rules of the game. This trips up some judges in terms of “doesn't resolve” versus “resolves and does nothing.” Is Norin not demonstrating advanced rules knowledge by expecting that the trigger will resolve and do nothing, as it should?
You can argue his intent of the hopes that she messes up and draws a card to get a GL. I think that's something we don't hold against Norin. In competitive play, players usually wish their opponent would make an in-game or tournament mistake that costs them a game. “It's not very sporting, but it's not unsportsmanlike.”
Originally posted by Julien de Graat:
I think this is GPE - DEC with a GL for Amanda and no infraction for Norin. Norin carefully chose his words and did not confirm the draw. He just confirmed that the trigger was resolving. Properly determining the correct actions to take upon resolution is up to Amanda. If she misinterpreted Norin's answer, well, too bad for her. Words have a meaning and Norin's answer was very precise.
Agreed. We can argue intent all we want and how shady it is, but I feel that the communication was clear. From the given scenario, both players discussed the trigger. If Amanda were to say “Draw a card” and Norin said “ok”, we're in the realm of GPE-GRV due to the “confirmed draw” clause of GPE-DEC. But Norin didn't confirm a draw. He confirmed a trigger, which Amanda acknowledged.
I think part of this discussion boils down to each individual judge's expectation of a player to prevent their opponent from drawing a card they shouldn't. How fast did Amanda do it? Did she lay the card out first? Could Norin have stopped her in time if he wanted to? These are very subjective questions.