Last tournament I made an error while judging. I wrongly upgraded a GRV to a game loss. I discussed this with my local judges and they convinced me I was wrong in upgrading it. However I still would like to put the situation open and hear what other judges have to say about it. I'm not necessarily looking for a “see I was right in the first place”, no I'm more into “why do we let this happen as judges”.
Situation:
Andy plays
Swords to Plowshares targetting his opponent's
Grizzly Bears. Andy than plays
Surgical Extraction targetting the exiled
Grizzly Bears. Neo agrees with this, reveals his hand and Andy quickly picks up the library to search for any remaining
Grizly Bears. While Andy is searching, Neo realizes this exiled
Grizly Bears couldn't be targetted by the
Surgical Extraction and calls Judge right away.
What we have here is a clear GRV from Andy, he targetted something that couldn't be targetted. Neo on the other hand shouldn't have let this happen and will Receive a F2MGS.
Now the question obviously is, do we back up, and what type of Penalties do we hand out. I think most of us would follow IPG guidelines would say, we simply back-up and give both players a Warning respectively for GRV and F2MGS.
What happened in my case was that I upgraded this to a game loss. In my defense this was only my second Competitive event and I did not have access to IPG (there was no internet available at the location).
The reason why I upgraded was that the integrity of this specific game was lost. Andy shouldn't have gotten the information and it was clear that Andy was at a too big advantage right now. I realized that Neo could have prevented this, but he was honest and said he was in a type of autopilot “yes go ahead”, only realizing quickly afterwards that there were restrictions to the target.
While trying to recall as much as possible from the IPG (as I wanted to be sure if there is anything else at play), I remembered this line:
IPG 2.1 Game Loss … It is also used for some infractions that have a higher probability for a player to gain advantage.
I am going to be honest and say that I knew that nothing in section IPG 2.5 mentioned that this type of offense could be upgraded. But this felt “right” to do, the upgrade to game loss, as I thought the GRV player had a high probability of gaining an advantage with this action.
Yesterday I was discussing this with my fellow regional judges and they obviously corrected this young eager judge. But I still felt that somewhere “in my gut” that I was right, not right according to the IPG, but right as in the spirit of the game.
I can honestly find a good number of situation where a player could play/resolve a card wrongly in order to gain advantage on information, information he should not get. My example is such an example. A player who willfully would play this wrong is always at an advantage:
- If his opponent spots he targets something wrong: GRV and he gets his card back, nothing to really be afraid of initially. (As we all know players who willfully do something wrong, know how to answer a judge in order to avoid severe penalties)
- If his opponent doesn't spot it: He gains information
- If his opponent spots it too late: Okay, though luck, but he still gained the information and backing this “information gain” is not possible.
This information gain is in my book a high probability of gaining an advantage as described in IPG 2.1. I'm not trying to bend/change the rules to prove I was right in the first place, all I'm trying to discuss is “can this information gain be seen as a higher possibility to gain advantage”