Also very curious about some other opinions on this.
I've always tried to go by the philosophy in the IPG that says “If a minor violation is quickly handled by the players to their mutual satisfaction, a judge does not need to intervene.”
I witnessed a scenario in which my partner was playing a win and in for the top 8 of a WMCQ and her and her opponent were board stalled. Lets call her AP and her opponent NAP for reasons.
AP has been attacking with Sun Titan every turn and having it chumped, she has been returning aether spellbomb to play on each attack, and it's what has been allowing her to attempt to stabilise against an aggressive deck.
In one combat step, both players write down damage before she moves to bring the spellbomb back, saying something akin to “spellbomb off the titan as per norm, pass turn” all in one motion after putting her pen down. NAP says yep, sure and just goes to have his turn as has been the pattern but a judge stepped in and said, nah, you can't do that.
Now I didn't say anything here because of a clear bias, but I definitely felt that them jumping in was potentially out of line and it did cost her the win and in.
As for Ian's scenario, and for the philosophy quoted above, I definitely wouldn't intervene. Both players are clearly happy to continue playing, if Ajani's opponent looked uncomfortable with them getting a token, and looked at me with a question in his eyes, I'd probably step in, but not before.
As for a significant pause, as long as nothing has happened, I'd probably still not step in. By the opponent comfortably allowing it, I'd want to see it as an implied allowing the trigger to be put on the stack situation, which is all we would offer if the opponent did have a problem anyway.
If the opponent has a problem, offer them the option of placing it on the stack (pro tip, they will say no :P) there is no warning for either player as the trigger is not detrimental and we never give warnings to opponents when triggers are missed :)
Edited Sean Crain (June 23, 2016 12:03:28 AM)