Originally posted by Lyle Waldman:While I am not sure calling out players who used a prominent way to cheat or were caught in a prominent way is fine. I am pretty sure it is not okay to use “funny” alterations of their name. Not cool!
the number of people who are Trevor Humphries or Alex Bertoncheaty
Originally posted by Lyle Waldman:I am, furthermore, fairly sure you are mistaken in your assessment that it is too hard for casual players to learn how to stack a deck if they plan to cheat in this way. For example it took me (at most) only a couple of hours to learn how to shuffle 7 lands on top of a library to fool my wife (L2-judge) in 1-vs-1 play and I do not consider myself to be good at sleight of hand or especially nimble with my hands. If you plan to cheat this is an easy and fairly untraceable way to cheat if you do not overdo it.
who can actually do this proficiently is sufficiently small as to make this particular avenue of cheating not something worth worrying about
Originally posted by Simon Ahrens:
The question I have is: Do we need new/additional policy for this?
If I understood him correctly Victor's easiest solution was: “A player can request that the opponent performs ONE additional cut to the deck of the original player.” So the opponent still has the last handling but the original player feels safer about the randomness of his new top X cards.
Victor Pinto
I really think that if your opponent shuffles your deck then it should be you cutting your own deck, since we know that shuffle tricks exist and the cut is a sign of transparency from the player that shuffles.
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