Originally posted by Toby Elliott:
I was answering the question “what do I need to say to move to having priority in BoC when I have a legitimate reason to do so?” Understanding that is easier if you have the wider context. I don't think that implied it was in contention.
Originally posted by Eli Meyer:
I agree, but that's because *the shortcut works.* It clearly disallows trying to use those kind of tricks. Pointing out that no one is using those tricks is like believing your antivirus software is useless because you've never seen your computer get a virus.
Originally posted by Eli Meyer:
Toby provided a clean solution here. The shortcut disallows anything that could be used to trick an opponent into casting a spell during the wrong phase (even if that's not the intent, and even if there's a good reason to play the way you're playing.) So you so you make it obvious–not “technically precise” obvious, but “explain it like I'm five” obvious–that you're still in main phase. As Toby said, “are you doing anything with your floating mana?” covers your bases nicely.
Originally posted by Justin Miyashiro:
So far, Lasse has been the only one to answer my query. What other
strategic considerations are we short-circuiting? My contention is that
there aren't any, or rather that there aren't enough strategic
considerations being lost to worry about in regards to the shortcut.
Originally posted by Jason Malott:That's not what's happening; we just aren't allowing you to be clever about it, in order to trick your opponent into acting in your Main Phase instead of Combat.
regarding not allowing AP to move to his Beginning of Combat while retaining priority
Originally posted by Jason Malott:“Hey, I've got some stuff to do in the Beginning of Combat?” is clear enough for me. So are the other suggestions I've offered up.
if someone will have a trigger happening at the Beginning of Combat and they don't want to announce it during their Main Phase
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:You keep saying this, but Kevin directly contradicts you. The article says: “This shortcut is true for any statement that would imply that you want to leave your first Main Phase, no matter how carefully it has been worded.”
“Hey, I've got some stuff to do in the Beginning of Combat?” is clear enough for me. So are the other suggestions I've offered up.
Originally posted by Mats Törnros:Please read what has been said in the thread. Context is important. What Kevin's article states is that no matter what you say, it will be considered that the turn is no longer in your main phase and that if you aren't doing anything at the beginning of combat (by being explicit about it, like Scott mentioned), it's assumed that if your opponent does anything, it will be in your beginning of combat. There are no contradictions here.Scott MarshallYou keep saying this, but Kevin directly contradicts you. The article says: “This shortcut is true for any statement that would imply that you want to leave your first Main Phase, no matter how carefully it has been worded.”
“Hey, I've got some stuff to do in the Beginning of Combat?” is clear enough for me. So are the other suggestions I've offered up.
Saying that you want to do stuff in the beginning of combat implies that you want to leave your first main phase, so it invokes the shortcut. Basically we have multiple high level policy setting judges directly contradicting each other, and this is extremely confusing.
Edited Carlos Ho (May 31, 2016 10:08:20 AM)