Suppose this situation:
I'm playing some sort of stax or whatever, with a Sylvan Library out. Specifically, a 5th Sylvan Library. My opponent plays a Pithing Needle, it resolves, he names Sylvan Library, I say "OK."
Did I do anything wrong? He did not ask if it worked or if it was an activated ability. I did not lie or provide false information of any kind.
Nope, not your fault. Had he asked for clarification then yes. However, your opponent should be knowledgeable, and if he doesn't know, that's his problem. It's unfortunate, but it's the rules.
A player can always ask for the current oracle wording of a card from a judge.
What if my opponent asks "Can I needle your Lightning Rift?" ?
I mean, technically you can choose any card with needle, it sometimes just won't have an effect. May I say "Sure, you can", or do I have to explain the difference between activated and trigggered abilities to him?
"My sky is darker than thine!"
SENTENCED - 1993
That is a good question. I guess you could technically get away with saying "yes you can target it". It would probably be considered as a shady move on your part considering if he is asking it is probably a noob. Then again they need to learn somehow.
I think RickRolling is still teh funny.
BZK! - Storm Boards
Been there, tried that, still casting Doomsday.
Drawing my deck for 0 mana since 2013.
Another great thing is when you work it the other way around, too. Maverick676 always tells me about the game he won by playing Needle and naming Krosan Reclamation. Apparently his opp didn't think he could play the flashback and decked because of it.
Team Info-Ninjas: Ambition is a poor excuse for not having enough sense to be lazy.
My Videos: Chiron Beta Prime, Flickr, Re: Your Brains
Originally Posted by Slay
They should introduce some sort of rule, which would oblige players to inform their opponents if the card text has been modified. What the heck, are we supposed to learn by hearth every errata ever printed ? Or perhaps am I supposed to ask my opponent, whenever he plays a card, 'is this card printed text up to date?'.
Knowing the rules, such as differences between triggered and activated abilities, is one thing. Asking players to know errata for every single card is something totally different.
How about a rule forcing ignorant opponents to concede before they accidentally topdeck the nuts to beat me? That'd be a much more fun rule. How hard is it to notice a major templating issue and inquire what the card's wording is? If I notice something like a 5th Sylvan Library I do ask if the printed card is up to date and usually before I get a response I call a judge. Then we chat about it as the judge comes over to confirm.
BZK! - Storm Boards
Been there, tried that, still casting Doomsday.
Drawing my deck for 0 mana since 2013.
Uh... not for a judge. They usually go to gatherer (or hop on their PDA) and get the current oracle wording. Players should always call for a judge when they aren't sure what a cards current oracle wording is. Players that don't make misplays when the information is readily available to them. That's just bad on their part.
Deliberately playing cards with misleading text to create advantage falls under Unsporting Conduct.
Deliberately misrepresenting what a card in play does is Cheating.
I would personally recommend just be being sporting and telling your opponent what the updated card text does. Is the advantage you may or may not gain worth exposing yourself to penalties?
You are free not to, but it's a narrow line to walk and if you cross it you're in trouble.
“It's possible. But it involves... {checks archives} Nature's Revolt, Opalescence, two Unstable Shapeshifters (one of which started as a Doppelganger), a Tide, an animated land, a creature with Fading, a Silver Wyvern, some way to get a creature into play in response to stuff, some way to get a land into play in response to stuff (a different land from the animated land), and one heck of a Rube Goldberg timing diagram.”
-David DeLaney
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)