Is Chalice Checking Cheating? - MTG Story Time

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  • čas přidán 15. 06. 2022
  • Checking an opponent on their Chalice of the Void triggers is part of the competitive game of Magic, especially in older formats. But in some circumstances, it can be a super scumbag maneuverer. Allow me to explain what Chalice Checking is, and that time I had the worst, most miserable scumbag of an opponent.
    More Story Time:
    • Being Accused of Cheat...
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Komentáře • 669

  • @PleasantKenobi
    @PleasantKenobi  Před 2 lety +9

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    • @MagicManAleister
      @MagicManAleister Před 2 lety +1

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    • @numnut154
      @numnut154 Před rokem +12

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    • @acenuke2513
      @acenuke2513 Před rokem +3

      @@numnut154 well i do not blame him because the scam requres a fair amount of research to see through but eh still not cool.

    • @pontusvongeijer1240
      @pontusvongeijer1240 Před rokem +1

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    • @TomBpersonal
      @TomBpersonal Před rokem +1

      ​@@numnut154 he cut it out of the video

  • @sharlockshacolmes9381
    @sharlockshacolmes9381 Před 2 lety +432

    That's a bit sketchy to chalice check like that.
    Personally I only chalice check when my opponent is on the stretcher because of all the anthrax I lace my sleeves with, that way I know they can't even call a judge.

  • @dazaran714
    @dazaran714 Před 2 lety +185

    Chalice checking during an asthma attack is ridiculous. They should have called a judge for slow-play.

  • @JamiesonLock
    @JamiesonLock Před 2 lety +404

    I had a fun game in Modern playing Elves against a Chalice player:
    Chalice normally shuts the deck down really hard, but I had two Cavern of Souls, so I wasn't affected at all. However, my opponent (on Mono-Blue Tron) tried to cast an Expedition Map. When I pointed out his own Chalice trigger, he declared "I'm choosing to miss it", to which I responded he couldn't do that. This had to be escalated to a Judge Call because he just couldn't accept that he couldn't choose to miss his own trigger (like he can if I'm casting a spell and he simply forgets) even with me there reminding him of it.

    • @Simonk_6
      @Simonk_6 Před 2 lety +181

      Lmao I choose to make this boardwipe one sided

    • @sertaki
      @sertaki Před 2 lety +5

      Amazing

    • @cannonspectacle5195
      @cannonspectacle5195 Před 2 lety +85

      Choosing to miss a trigger? What was this player on lmao

    • @skyguytomas9615
      @skyguytomas9615 Před 2 lety +45

      Too noob to be throwing such heat such as chalice. 'This potion is too strong for you.'

    • @AngelusNielson
      @AngelusNielson Před 2 lety +42

      @@skyguytomas9615 Sounds more like a cheater to me.

  • @Bradd3us
    @Bradd3us Před 2 lety +52

    Years ago, at an LGS that ran friday night modern, I had a guy that tried to chalice check me. He intentionally covered the mana cost of the card with his thumb, mumbled the spell name and tried to put it into graveyard before I could respond with my trigger. I called him out on it and told him to put the card face up on the table facing me so i could see its CMC. It really made me sad that someone wanted to behave like this at FNM level.

  • @CL0NK_
    @CL0NK_ Před 2 lety +250

    I was once in a two headed giant tournament and an opponent cast a spell and put it on the table, when I tried to counter it he told me that once a spell hits the table it has resolved...

    • @kyonsenzu8799
      @kyonsenzu8799 Před 2 lety +64

      That's actually bs how are you supposed to know what the card is to want to counter it? It's not like you know what's in your opponents hand before they play their cards.

    • @AngelusNielson
      @AngelusNielson Před 2 lety +91

      @@kyonsenzu8799 Yah, that's either ignorance or cheating. Probably the second.

    • @skyguytomas9615
      @skyguytomas9615 Před 2 lety +43

      Yeah that's not how priority works.

    • @CL0NK_
      @CL0NK_ Před 2 lety +41

      @@kyonsenzu8799 Yeah, me and my 2hg partner immediately called BS and he pretty quickly stopped trying it with us, I believe later in that tournament the same team was soulbonding cards with each other which is not how the ability works so it was either not understanding or hoping to super cheat

    • @kiyancarre6345
      @kiyancarre6345 Před 2 lety +12

      If that was actually legal people could palp cards in their hand and slam them o to the table and they wouldve "resolved" without any ability to see the card. Dud3 was talkoj out if his ass

  • @user-te6oi9kk7c
    @user-te6oi9kk7c Před 2 lety +182

    Record goes to the pre-release player (I was judging) who tried "My opponent didn't declare the excess damage for trample so I assume they assigned 6 damage to the 1/1 and 0 to me"...

    • @qwormuli77
      @qwormuli77 Před 2 lety +27

      Doesn't trample default to a mininum value, unless specified in the rules?

    • @bensaylor9093
      @bensaylor9093 Před 2 lety +15

      Wow. Almost charmingly stupid thing to say.
      Edit: I mean the guy not the OP.

    • @dalevanvleet9357
      @dalevanvleet9357 Před 2 lety +7

      It does not automatically assign anything. Players can make that mistake. The only damage that auto assigns technically is deathtouch. And even then people can angle shoot

    • @qwormuli77
      @qwormuli77 Před 2 lety +9

      @@dalevanvleet9357 Not strictly, but functionally it goes in the assigned order and in a common understanding. *IF* no such understanding is reached without parsing, the game reverts to the specified step. Here it means that when the defender calls judge on assumed trample damage, the damage is just clarified and the game resumes, as the gamestate most likely hasn't progresses far. If it has (for some weird reason), handling shortcuts and handling illegal actions are to be consulted.
      So yes, trample "assumes" minimal assigned damage under the same ruling that deathtouch does, with DT just adding a minimal required damage of 1 before further modifiers.

    • @jdr12391
      @jdr12391 Před 7 měsíci

      This excess damage comment happened to my at Yugioh Nationals final round table 1. Opponent drew a card after being dealt lethal and claimed I didn’t announce one creatures attack , so he drew and began his turn calling a judge. I’m still mad 10 years later

  • @SylveonSimp
    @SylveonSimp Před 2 lety +39

    My opponent: has a heartattack
    Me: Ponder Chalice Checking

    • @TheWaffleRadio
      @TheWaffleRadio Před 6 měsíci +2

      Opponent: receiving a surprise emergency message that he's being evicted.
      Me: so... my Path to Exile resolves

  • @fighterphoenix5789
    @fighterphoenix5789 Před 2 lety +63

    I just realized chalice has counters, so removing the counters with "Hex parasite" or increasing it via proliferate is a funny way messing with it.

    • @Sevifor
      @Sevifor Před 2 lety +10

      For a while, people played Throne of Geth for this explicit purpose in eternal formats as a way to proliferate chalice triggers. I don't know if that still happens, but it was delightful tech that I really enjoyed hearing about.

    • @fighterphoenix5789
      @fighterphoenix5789 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Sevifor khan's bastion works similar

    • @zealot2147
      @zealot2147 Před 2 lety +5

      There's a real funny gp coverage of stiflenaut v eldrazi or something. Eldrazi played chalice, stiflenaut cast some phyrexian tezz spell and proliferated it to 2. Opp cast a 2 mana spell, resolved, and they remembered chalice. It was a pretty funny exchange bc the chalice player meant no Ill will

  • @somersaultjump
    @somersaultjump Před 2 lety +59

    I remember one time back in INN/RTR standard I was playing at an event that was larger than what I was used to. In one game I cast a Huntmaster of the Fells and signaled to my opponent that I had a triggered ability, to which he acknowledged it resolving. I created the 2/2 and adjusted the dice I was using to track my life total, and passed the turn. We get to combat on his turn, he attacks me and I end up taking some damage and say "ok I go down to X life." He then calls a judge, points to the pad he was tracking life totals on, and says that I was tracking my life total incorrectly because I had not specifically declared my life gain from the Huntmaster trigger on the previous turn. The judge ruled in my favor, because I had resolved the other half of the trigger and my opponent acknowledged it, but that left a bad taste in my mouth. It felt like a blatant attempt at angle shooting, and it worsened my play experience for the remainder of the match.

    • @ZakanaHachihaCBC
      @ZakanaHachihaCBC Před 2 lety +15

      Oh yeah that’s definitely angle shooting. You can’t miss part of a trigger. Do you still use a die or have you moved to pen and paper?

    • @somersaultjump
      @somersaultjump Před 2 lety +13

      @@ZakanaHachihaCBC I still just use dice when I play casually, but at bigger events with higher stakes I absolutely use pen and paper.

    • @damionwhitehead1165
      @damionwhitehead1165 Před 2 lety +17

      Sounds like your opponent was not properly tracking life totals to me. He acknowledged your trigger and then didn't add the life points to his tracker.

    • @ZakanaHachihaCBC
      @ZakanaHachihaCBC Před 2 lety +11

      @@damionwhitehead1165 It’s underhanded at best and down right cheating at worst.

    • @shaunmcisaac782
      @shaunmcisaac782 Před rokem

      @@ZakanaHachihaCBC Definitely cheating - Misrep'ing game state.

  • @chalkchalkson5639
    @chalkchalkson5639 Před 2 lety +189

    Just as annoying to me is when people try to angle shoot on communications. Like chalice checking 5 times, you say "chalice trigger, gets countered; chalice; [points to chalice]" and then finally you just go "hmm" assuming you are on the same page and then they pretend that was acknowledgement of their thing resolving. I had a few cases where at casual events (like side events or fnm) where people clearly understood what you meant but pretended not to for their own gain. Sure you're *supposed* to be unambiguous with your language, but on a long day of casual play you are allowed to abbreviate stuff, right?

    • @mrmeepmeep2486
      @mrmeepmeep2486 Před 2 lety +7

      Stopped going to legacy events at a local LGS and started going to another one instead after this exact experience

    • @maban1
      @maban1 Před 2 lety +19

      I physically put my finger on chalice and say chalice every time to avoid confusion.

    • @emperornapoleon6204
      @emperornapoleon6204 Před 2 lety +16

      One time I was playing in some Swiss rounds at a larger local tournament and my opponent called the judge to try and get his Abundant Growth to resolve through my chalice: I had declared “no response” because there was a triggered ability to resolve before resolving the spell, and he was trying to say I let it resolve through the chalice. The judge sided with me.
      The icing on the cake is he started playing his first turn before I declared whether I was mulliganing, and I just let him play when I could have easily brought the judge over to penalize him…

    • @TheREALGalamineGary
      @TheREALGalamineGary Před 2 lety +6

      I start a lot of sentences with “okay” or “yeah” as in “okay this happens” or “yeah I’m gonna counter that spell”… I’ve only had one or two people try to use my affirmative words at the start of “okay chalice trigger” against me but it’s kinda obnoxious

    • @Nether2342
      @Nether2342 Před 2 lety +2

      Just as an FYI that would never fly at a competitive REL event, and wouldn’t fly at most casual events either. I would suggest talking to the people who run the store about that and if it doesn’t get fixed finding a new one.

  • @nathanokerlund9063
    @nathanokerlund9063 Před 2 lety +19

    My own high-water mark for observed cheating was the pre-release opponent who had been angle-shooting for two games, just at the edge of plausible deniability, who ended our match by asking, "I won game one, right?"
    Reader, he had not one game one, and when I said so he just picked up his cards and playmat and moved on, which was in its way more creepy than if he had tried to argue about it.

  • @PatJamma
    @PatJamma Před 2 lety +63

    So I haven't exactly had a Chalice check moment per se, but I did run into a very unsportsman-like opponent who soiled my first FNM experience. This was years ago. I was excited to play Modern for the first time at my LGS. I recognized a few of the players there as I had been in many times to play Commander. Everyone knew I was new to Modern and I had no clue what meta decks were, I built mono white Soul Sisters because my friend said he was doing well with it. I got a lucky game one against Scapeshift, and game 2 I got matched up against someone playing blue black fairies so I had a free win there. At this point I'm 2-0 and I'm on top of the world. I sit down for game 3 and realize my opponent was someone who was just hovering over my table watching the majority of my previous game meaning they knew my deck pretty inside and out. I chuckle a bit and point that out to my opponent and probe to see if he would tell me what his deck is "haha I guess you have the advantage since you were just watching my last game. Unless you want to fill me in on what you're playing to make it even?" I would have accepted most answers, but my opponent replies with a very snide "Oh you'll find out soon enough. Don't worry." Not the end of the world. He didn't have to tell me his deck. Well as it turns out he was playing what was at the time the top tier Modern deck. Abzan CoCo with Melira and infinite persist. I'd like to remind you all that at this point I'm an extreme casual who up until this point had only played EDH; CoCo is NOT a commander card and I've never seen it before. Nor had I bothered with any Persist creatures because they didn't seem that great in EDH. I have no fucking clue what any of my opponent's cards do, He's mentioning rules and trigger sequencing and all this shit that I have never even had to deal with, at one point he cast a CoCo in response to one of my Soul Sisters without mentioning it was in response to the cast so I thought I was getting more life than I was and he was getting frustrated. At this point I call the judge over and I'm just like "dude I'm new, I have no clue what's going on and my opponent isn't explaining his cards." The judge, who was just the store owner, was more than happy to sit there for the rest of our match and explain my opponent's cards because he wouldn't, and walk me through the combo that my opponent was doing as he was doing it, and verified with me what my life total should be at; no advice, just verifying boardstate and explaining. I ended up losing that game and that was fine, but the store owner made note of that guy's behavior, and was soon after banned from the store for continued unsportsmanlike behavior and just generally being a dick and short-tempered

    • @TwilitLugia
      @TwilitLugia Před 2 lety +9

      "Nor had I bothered with any Persist creatures because they didn't seem that great in EDH."
      Me: "Laughs in Mikaeus combos"

    • @miaschwartz1074
      @miaschwartz1074 Před 2 lety +14

      To the store owner who kicked this guy out. Good job. This kind of attitude is the worst for creating welcoming environment and allowing people of all experiences to play

    • @diogenesrex7847
      @diogenesrex7847 Před rokem +14

      One of the first times I went to FNM, right after I had started playing actually, (just jammed together some Guilds of Ravnica era sub-par white weenie Standard deck) one opponent did some crazy infinite looping combo when I was tapped out. Can't remember the combo for the life of me, but it involved using Omniscience and using different spells to constantly shuffle and draw (for what win con I have no idea)
      It's a small town LGS, so the judges, who were staff at the store who knew me from shopping for comics and DnD supplies, knew that I had never played before.
      I was just sitting there watching this dude goldfish for a few minutes when one of the judges wandered over. Recognizes the board state immediately. He kinda checks on me to see if I'm salty or anything and I had no idea what was happening, I just kinda said I'm impressed with the combo.
      I guess it didn't sit right with the judge that this guy was blazing through triggers, explaining nothing, kinda taking advantage of the fact I was a new player. As the judge is there, my opponent resolves some effect that causes him to draw 7 cards. As he's about to do the cycle, shuffle the hand and graveyard into the library thing again, the judge stops him.
      "Draw 7?"
      "Yeah."
      "It resolved?"
      "Yup!"
      "How many cards in library?"
      Dude pauses. Gets kinda nervous. As the judge reaches out, he fans his deck.
      "Five."
      "Oh, so you lost. Game 2 to Diogenes."
      I learned several lessons about Magic that night.

    • @zaliacrimson5401
      @zaliacrimson5401 Před rokem +1

      Git Gud 🤷🏼‍♂️

    • @DemonBlanka
      @DemonBlanka Před 7 měsíci

      More confirmation bias for me that all CoCo players are degenerates.

  • @alexmo1941
    @alexmo1941 Před 2 lety +43

    I once was spectating a player at an FNM that had a thought knot seer. The opponent killed TKS by blocking and killing it, then didn't draw a card from the death trigger. I pointed it out in the end step when it was evident that nobody else was going to speak up and the player who controlled TKS claimed that he "missed his own trigger" and that the opponent couldn't draw, making it evident that the player was aware of the draw trigger and was angle shooting intentionally. That was a real quick warning from the judge I called over.

  • @TP_Rockstar
    @TP_Rockstar Před 2 lety +83

    So an opponent trying to cast spells through a chalice, checking you to see if you miss it, is ofcourse legal, however I've had games were it went in a different direction. First, some time ago, before the pandemic, I played a lot of Merfolk. I had an idea to buy into the deck so I could play it in modern, legacy and eventually vintage (last part never happened). Merfolk play Cavern of souls which, like you said, makes it possible to bypass the Chalices. An opponent I played against kept doing the reverse check, where he would point out my Chalice trigger, even though I cast spells that were uncounterable. Never got me, but that was a bit scummy.
    The second time however, I was playing against a D&T deck in a local legacy tournament. This was quite some time ago, when I was new to eternal formats and was still borrowing half my deck from local people. The D&T player knew I was new to the format, and since I was playing some kind of Delver deck at the time, Chalice was ofcourse good against me. I accidentally ran a couple of spells into the chalice before understanding what was going on, and from there I lost the game. It was only later that I learned Chalice was symetrical, because my opponent had been playing his own spells through his own chalice without me knowing, having never played against it before. The tournament was already over and I didn't really play against him again, because he moved and stopped coming to our local tournaments, but that was an awful experience to have.

    • @zirilan3398
      @zirilan3398 Před 2 lety +13

      To check if you forget that you used Cavern-mana is pretty legit tbh. I played Chalice for years and therefor made it a habit to announce just everything I do.

    • @Sevifor
      @Sevifor Před 2 lety +4

      @@jaywinner328 It is, but what Ziri is suggesting is that it's good habit to announce every Chalice trigger because the opponent might try to "chalice check" them at some point by casting a creature with mana that was *not* produced from Cavern of Soul's uncounterable ability. If the opponent was always clear about saying "cast X creature with uncounterable mana from Cavern of Souls" then maybe announcing the Chalice trigger for that spell would be unnecessary, but until then, announcing Chalice triggers every time is best practice to make sure you don't get taken advantage of.
      Now, if they DO cast a spell with uncounterable mana and the Chalice player allows it to be countered, THEN that is a problem.

    • @zirilan3398
      @zirilan3398 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Sevifor Not really, depending on the rule enforcement level both get a warning for failed to maintain gamestate and it will be rewinded up to that point if possible

    • @Frankenstein3r
      @Frankenstein3r Před 2 lety +4

      that second story is a player just straight up cheating. Very scummy and sorry to hear it happened to you.

    • @d_andrews
      @d_andrews Před 2 lety +9

      Them missing their chalice triggers on their own spells is just straight up illegal play, right? You're not allowed to miss triggers that are detrimental to you.

  • @wat_omy
    @wat_omy Před 2 lety +50

    I put 20 mana into Chalice during a cedh game while my friend was playing his Kozilek deck. It was the optimal bm.

    • @timtanner9469
      @timtanner9469 Před 2 lety +7

      That's beautiful. Thank you you've given me a goal to work towards lol

    • @wat_omy
      @wat_omy Před 2 lety +11

      @@timtanner9469 If it wasn’t his table we were playing on, he probably would have flipped it.

    • @Ixidora
      @Ixidora Před 2 lety +3

      WHAT!?!! OH MY!!

    • @thekopekemaster
      @thekopekemaster Před 2 lety +3

      Might as well just play a Meddling Mage at that point lol

    • @jonaswilliams9755
      @jonaswilliams9755 Před 2 lety +2

      What the hell was that pod? Kozilek isn't really cedh material.

  • @StazTheBeave
    @StazTheBeave Před 2 lety +51

    I play yugioh, as well as magic, and its pretty bizarre that mandatory triggers, especially ones that are both sided *could* be ignored because of how complicated the boards happen. In yugioh, if a trigger is mandatory, and either play fails to notice it until later, that could mean the entire game could just be thrown out; because that game would be basically illegal.

    • @TheShalestorm
      @TheShalestorm Před 2 lety +8

      and honestly i kind of side with YGO on that one. imagine if at some point in a chess game i - against you without you noticing right away. Move a black square Bishop to a white square during a diagonal move.
      and then we dont notice until like 4 turns later.
      I wouldn't call anything that comes from that game legitimate.

    • @StazTheBeave
      @StazTheBeave Před 2 lety +2

      @@Atmapalazzo Well for the most part, unlike magic you can know the state of all the cards in your deck. And in a tournament setting; you as a player; should know everything in your deck. So why would a search effect be allowed to resolve.
      But yea, yugioh is the odd one on out in that, cause in both pokemon and mtg your allowed "illegally search".

    • @pauperism7425
      @pauperism7425 Před 2 lety +2

      i dont play yugioh so just basing on what you said couldnt you intentionally mis a trigger when losing then after call a judge and get that game thrown out?

    • @StazTheBeave
      @StazTheBeave Před 2 lety +4

      @@pauperism7425 its up to a judge, but if your the one doing the mistakes, and it isnt both players youll be the one to lose.

    • @arandombard1197
      @arandombard1197 Před měsícem

      It's easy to throw out the whole game when it only lasts 3 turns.

  • @Revenant530
    @Revenant530 Před 2 lety +19

    Had a few try to do this to me and got salty when caught. Actually had one remove the counter from my chalice when I took a drink. He got thrown out because he didn’t know a judge was behind them watching the match

    • @qwormuli77
      @qwormuli77 Před 2 lety +2

      Damn, that second one wasn't even cheating in RAI, but straight up cheating in RAW.

  • @EbonAvatar
    @EbonAvatar Před 2 lety +24

    I'll be honest I've never heard of chalice checking before this but now that I've given it a think it definitely seems scummy no matter what the context. It's hard for me to draw a line that says "chalice checking is ok, but not when an opponent is distracted." It's either ok or it isn't

    • @dapperghastmeowregard
      @dapperghastmeowregard Před 2 lety +7

      What's really wild is that chalice checking yoyr opponent is perfectly fine (I mean, it's cheating, but there's no penalty for it, so), but literally ignoring literally the exact same mandatory effect to get literally the same advantage is big trouble if you chalice check yourself.

    • @EbonAvatar
      @EbonAvatar Před 2 lety +3

      @@dapperghastmeowregard yeah it's one thing if it was a "may" trigger, then casting a spell when you think your opponent won't remember the trigger is fine, but otherwise the more I think about it the more it just seems scummy to do full stop, whether or not your opponent has bad allergies at that moment

    • @dapperghastmeowregard
      @dapperghastmeowregard Před 2 lety +5

      @@EbonAvatar I kinda wanna try playing Chalice, then when my opponent tries to check me, be like "In response, tap Bazaar Trader to donate Chalice to you, the trigger has already passed, call a judge on you for resolving a card through your own Chalice."
      99% sure that doesn't actually work, you'd still control the initial trigger, but it makes me smile.

    • @EbonAvatar
      @EbonAvatar Před 2 lety +1

      @@dapperghastmeowregard if you ever pulled that off on me I'd tip my cap to you and concede the game to you. Touche, good sir

    • @PoeticMistakes
      @PoeticMistakes Před 3 měsíci

      This is something i enjoy about YUGIOH. maintaining the board state is the responsibility of all players, so mandatory triggers are everyone's problem. Thus chalice checking is just cheating, but Yugioh will rewind board states when genuine mistakes are made.

  • @lasterman94100
    @lasterman94100 Před 2 lety +45

    Just recently, I sat at a table for baldur's gate draft, most players were on their first draft ever and trying to enjoy it, and then there was a level 2 headjudge, aiming hardcore for the win (yes at a prerelease commander game), it was miserable for everybody, he wasn't nice, wasn't joking or smiling, tried many times to cheat and I had to call him out everytime that I could catch him drawing an extra card, adding an extra treasure, etc... At the end, he broke an agreement we had when we agreed before the game it wasn't allowed, but then he called a judge who said it wasn't strictly an obligation, shortly after he unsurprisingly won, then said good game and smiled while everyone else was already packing their stuff in silence
    In the end he won a single extra pack, but boy did he make sure everyone was sad and bored, true PoS, which is sad considering most people I meet through MTG are smart and nice...

    • @TheDartrunner
      @TheDartrunner Před 2 lety +17

      I think you should report that person, There is a form on the Judge Academy you can submit to report a judge.

    • @spucrl2616
      @spucrl2616 Před 2 lety +10

      Like theDartrunner said, if there's a judge cheating report. That person doesn't deserve the title of a judge.

    • @zaliacrimson5401
      @zaliacrimson5401 Před rokem

      I don't believe you considering how shitty your grammar and punctuation is.

    • @lasterman94100
      @lasterman94100 Před rokem +1

      @@zaliacrimson5401 Well English isn't my mother's tongue so ponctuation might be off, I don't believe I made grammar error though, thanks for pointing out something that has nothing to do with the subject...

  • @kazeinu0151
    @kazeinu0151 Před 2 lety +50

    Yeah I think trying to catch your opponent in a technicality instead of winning with your cards is probably the worst thing you can do in a TCG outside of blatant cheating

    • @qwormuli77
      @qwormuli77 Před 2 lety +3

      Winning by technicality is nothing bad, except maybe in the completely non-competitive formats/circles. That is, as long as the technicality is set and established beforehand and it happens within the game and with matters within the game. If the rules are rules, you go by the rules as rules as the situation develops. If the rules are bad, you change them. Trying to game with pre-, postgame or matter outside of it is scummy as hell, though. For example, the obfuscating player perception here is really low. Same for using rules made for stuff outside the game, like concession rules and such, or cheating by cheating enforcement (the retroactive morph DQ case or a typo in a tournament admission etc.). But if you name the wrong card, even if you mean another, it's not bad for the opponent/judge to hold you onto it in a game with stakes.

    • @LouisKing995
      @LouisKing995 Před rokem +5

      @@qwormuli77Just play your cards dudes, if they are good, and you are good, you’ll win, no need for BS.

    • @Necroskull388
      @Necroskull388 Před 8 měsíci +5

      @@qwormuli77I think that it’s part of the game, no way to get rid of it, but it’s still scummy to actively choose to try and win by angleshooting rather than just playing the game as intended.

    • @nicholas8739
      @nicholas8739 Před 7 měsíci +1

      ​@@qwormuli77While I agree that winning by a technicality is nothing bad, but I do think there is a sportsmanship that you should have with it. This example is clearly bad sportsmanship.

  • @JordanGrayson00
    @JordanGrayson00 Před 2 lety +66

    I only play at FNM level where the stakes are a bit different. But I can’t imagine feeling good about winning a game because your opponent missed triggers.
    I tend to remind opponents of things like Mayhem Devil triggers and I hope they do the same for me. I think of it as working together to maintain to the rules and correct state of the game as closely as possible. It’s less likely both of us miss something.

    • @nicholasfarrell5981
      @nicholasfarrell5981 Před 2 lety +11

      ☝this. I personally feel like helping another player improve their game is more important than winning because I exploited someone else's inexperience or distraction.

    • @joshuagriffith9191
      @joshuagriffith9191 Před 2 lety +3

      I agree. But I have had points where I stopped because they were missing triggers every turn. There gets to be a point when you start screwing up your play when you are trying to keep track of your opponents triggers.

    • @TheOnlyBootlegger
      @TheOnlyBootlegger Před 2 lety

      You're one win away from top 8 of a GP. Your opponent is on 3 life, and just cast a Chalice on 1 while you're tapped out, but you have a Bolt in hand. You wouldn't be okay with it if your opponent missed their Chalice trigger and scooped it up when you cast that Bolt on a later turn?

    • @joshuagriffith9191
      @joshuagriffith9191 Před 2 lety +7

      @@TheOnlyBootlegger If your one win away from the top 8 of a GP, your opponent wouldn’t miss that trigger. I don’t know if you’ve ever played in a GP, but your opponent is not going to scoop with that much money on the line after two days of play without checking the board state to see if there is a way that they aren’t dead.

    • @JordanGrayson00
      @JordanGrayson00 Před 2 lety +2

      @@TheOnlyBootlegger I mean it could very well be the kind of thing where everyone says they would help a stranger being robbed in front of them until the chips are down and it actually happens. But I really can’t get into the mindset of trying to cast that bolt knowing it would just get countered by the chalice.

  • @aaron.k.
    @aaron.k. Před 2 lety +23

    I'm here for this channel moving into purely dog costuming content.

  • @flurbleflurb5588
    @flurbleflurb5588 Před 2 lety +30

    I'll never need to worry about Chalice Checking. Not because I'm a good or even semi-competent player, but because I'll never be able to afford them!

    • @ldgarius
      @ldgarius Před 7 měsíci +1

      huh, just get any chinese to print one dude...

    • @flurbleflurb5588
      @flurbleflurb5588 Před 7 měsíci

      @@ldgarius Haha, the temptation's there- but at the same time, if I'm proxying cards, it's only fair to the other players who buy real cards to only do it for multiple copies of cards I already own. Don't wanna randomly rock up with a proxied £100,000+ deck!
      ...Or maybe I do. That'd be hilarious.

  • @casteanpreswyn7528
    @casteanpreswyn7528 Před 2 lety +9

    It is kinda shitty to do this, but it's definitely not cheating. And yeah, I've had something *WAY* worse happen to me. I'll explain:
    It was a commander tournament at a store that just opened up a week before. I enrolled in the tournament($5 entrance fee for the possibility of winning a Lorwyn box, due to location and competition they were desperate for players, I found this out later) there were only 4 of us that entered the tournament, including the son of the store owner.
    Everything goes fine for 6 or 7 turns(can't remember exactly cause it's been a few years), I'm playing Mikaeus The Unhollowed and have a very favorable board state. One of my opponents, the son of the store owner, is running Sen Triplets. On his turn, he forgets the Sen Triplets trigger and proceeds as normal. It eventually becomes my turn and I draw Cauldren of Souls and play it. At this point I had Kheru Bloodsucker out as well as Mikaeus, and Viscera Seer out as well as a Grave Titan.
    So I begin my loop to win the game, when the Sen Triplets player decides that, since he missed the trigger, it is okay for him to retroactively use it to steal my Cauldren of Souls, I stop the game and demand a judge comes over(assuming this store has a judge), turns out the only judge is the owner of the store aka the father of the Sen Triplets player and he rules that its totally fair for him to retroactively play my Cauldren of Souls. I picked my shit up and left. I received a permanent ban from the store for my actions, but the plus side is the store closed in about 2 weeks.
    I found out about the desperation for players due to one of the employees eventually becoming an employee at the lgs I normally visit. This is also how I leaned the whole tournament was probably a scam.

    • @ScorpioneOrzion
      @ScorpioneOrzion Před 2 lety +5

      Missed trigger + not in hand + not detrimental trigger, also casting with Sen Triplets is an action you may take.
      Due to the card drawn, its unknown you had the Cauldren of Souls in your hand at that timing. So the action of you casting the Cauldren of Souls, and them missing the trigger, and then wanting to reverse the trigger gives them unfair advantage. In magic you as well can't reverse actions and or phases when cards are moved from a library to any other zone. (So I would say about 4 to 5 rules were broken here.)

  • @WolfLink64
    @WolfLink64 Před 2 lety +7

    Benefit of the doubt would be maybe he didn't know you were reaching for an inhaler, he just saw you rummaging in your bag for some unknown reason and went for the check. Idk I wasn't there, so I don't know how blatantly obvious it was that you needed an inhaler. And maybe the opponent just didn't put 2 and 2 together on wheezing followed by reaching into a bag.

    • @ScorpioneOrzion
      @ScorpioneOrzion Před 2 lety +5

      Even if he was doing it for something else, if he never passed priority, they can't even resolve their card.

  • @stevenglowacki8576
    @stevenglowacki8576 Před 2 lety +26

    There are many reasons why I stopped judging, but the ever-evolving rules around triggered abilities that it's possible to "miss" was one of them. I judged what I think was a state championship at a time when there was a Jace whose +1 ability was something like "Whenever a creature attacks you until your next turn, it gets -1/-0 until end of turn". People assumed this worked the same as a static ability that said "Until your next turn, creatures attacking you get -1/-0", but in the era of the ability to miss beneficial triggers, it does not, and you had to declare the trigger as the creature attacks or you don't get it. At least, that was the rule for that tournament. I don't know if the rules team ever changed it to specify that it was only for things that actually moved cards between zones or whatever, as I quit judging soon after that. It was not a fun day for me.

    • @juter1122
      @juter1122 Před 2 lety +1

      that's an issue of misreading the card. it sounds clear to me getting minutes to look at the wording

    • @stevenglowacki8576
      @stevenglowacki8576 Před 2 lety +7

      @@juter1122 I guess you're misinterpreting the issue. Most people at that time were completely unaware that they had to announce beneficial triggers they controlled that merely changed a creature's characteristics, mainly because it was a very new concept that was not exactly well-communicated to anyone other than judges. No one was "missing" these triggers (for the most part) - they were just assuming everyone knew they happened, because that's how it worked for a long time. That is, by trying to fix one problem with illegal game states, they made people have to speak up about things they never had to before, and was rarely an issue. That the judging powers that be thought this was perfectly reasonable policy was one of many things, when all put together, that made me not want to judge anymore.

    • @brofst
      @brofst Před 7 měsíci

      It was in fact changed, you can't be angle shot by that anymore.

  • @ScottKDrums
    @ScottKDrums Před 2 lety +19

    Triggers and checks was what got me to quit competitive magic. Back when pod was a thing, I had an opponent call judge on me when I sac'd a kitchen finks to pod, resolved pod first, when said "persist" -- They said because I missed the trigger, I couldn't persist Finks. I played it that way for 4 rounds of the tournament and was feeling good from my 3-1, so I called judge. The judge came over and said I missed it and to play on. I lost that match because of that single missed trigger and it was a terrible feel bad moment. I get now that the sacrifice was a cost to activate the ability, so it had to resolve first, but these are things that anyone not familiar to competitive magic can ruin an experience. And if it happened at an FNM, screw that guy.

    • @PleasantKenobi
      @PleasantKenobi  Před 2 lety +24

      You got scummed. That person got you on a technicality of semantics. Everyone in that circumstances knows what's happening.

    • @jamesmcelwain342
      @jamesmcelwain342 Před 2 lety +7

      That just sounds like Out of Order Sequencing so yeah you shouldn’t have been forced to miss it

    • @skippycoulter
      @skippycoulter Před 2 lety +4

      Aren't you allowed to do things slightly out of order if the results would be the same anyway and so long as you comply with a request to reorder correctly from an opponent?

  • @innerspacedruid4323
    @innerspacedruid4323 Před 2 lety +3

    My chalice checking story is at GP London's Legacy Challenge. It was the final round before top-cut and my game against a Nic Fit player was deterministic of which one of us makes top 32. I have 2 turn lethal with 2 Reality Smashers so my opponent's gambit is to mutter Top, quickly play Sensei's Divining Top and immediately activate it, I clock them about grab the top 3 and stop them with my Chalice trigger, clearly the Nic Fit player knew the judge would side with them if I didn't stop them exactly then. A turn later, they scoop, and don't say a word as they pack up and leave in a hurry.

  • @Fierlyt
    @Fierlyt Před 2 lety +7

    I had a game in No Ban List Modern in a side event where I was playing a R/G Eldrazi deck against a standard deck with a NBL mana base. Game was going late as they has a bunch of counter spells. I had at some point, put a challice on two. Neither of us had a way to remove it, we had a conversation about it while we were playing.
    I cast a Warping Wail targetting a creature they had with 1 power, and moved the card directly from my hand to my graveyard without waiting and chuckled a little. We had a judge sitting next to us watching the game as we were the last two playing at the table. My opponent, however didn't get what I was doing and cast Syncopate to counter my Warping Wail, at which point I said "Oh, in response to the chalice trigger? Ok." To which they responded something like, "Oh, right. I guess so." I moved Warping Wail to exile, they put Syncopate in the graveyard, a bit sad that they didn't realize I was throwing the card away intentionally. The judge said to us both after the game, "I've never seen a chalice trigger bait a counterspell before. That's my new favorite chalice play." because to both the judge and I it was obvious that I wasn't intending to resolve the spell.
    I won the game with a Reality Smasher cast using Cavern of Souls and empowered with Kessig Wolf Run, so it didn't change the result at all, but it was a goofy point in the game.

    • @pillsandangels
      @pillsandangels Před 2 lety

      "No banned list modern" is a funny way to say vintage.

    • @james-ht3ps
      @james-ht3ps Před 2 lety

      Similar story when i was playing tron vs fish in modern and put a chalice on 2, cast a pyroclasm into a chalice on 2 and my opponent saced his curse catcher to daze it figuring it was dead anyways.
      i opted not to pay.

  • @DimaVenger
    @DimaVenger Před 7 měsíci +2

    Reminds me of the time I went to a tournament as a kid, and my opponent in round 2 started spasming and I realized he's having an epileptic seizure. I immediately called for help, and the organizers made sure an ambulance came and took the guy to the hospital. In all the chaos though, I left my table with all my stuff on it, and when I came back my deck was gone, because somebody used the opportunity to swipe my type2 (that's what we called standard back then) deck and my backpack with my (admittedly rather lackluster) trade binder. I had to drop out of the tournament because I didn't have a deck to compit with, and shortly after I quit MTG for around 10 years, only coming back to it as a young adult.

    • @fritzabee
      @fritzabee Před 6 měsíci +1

      I am so sorry that happened to you. How awful and traumatic!

  • @jamiecruz4421
    @jamiecruz4421 Před 2 lety +4

    isn't it possible he just forgot for a moment? I have literally read a card, realized I can't do something, I start thinking hard about something else and completely forget the first thing then end up playing right into the thing I was trying to avoid in the first place. Magic is hard.

    • @grubbygeorge2117
      @grubbygeorge2117 Před 7 měsíci

      It's a tournament. For a prize. At that level, people know what they're doing.

  • @ThaddeusMike
    @ThaddeusMike Před 2 lety +19

    Chalice checking is the best argument against playing in paper that I've ever heard. Yes, taking advantage of a medical situation is scummy, but when you've set the standard as what the rules allow on the narrowest interpretation then you're setting yourself up for scummy play.

    • @TheShalestorm
      @TheShalestorm Před 2 lety

      THIS!!!!
      imagine if i just, mid chess game.
      Dupe you...i slip my bishop during his diagonal to say, a black square from a white. and now i pin a high value piece of yours like a queen with an illegal move.
      But we just carry on cus "ya gonna have to be quicker than that"
      Like cmon.

    • @ldgarius
      @ldgarius Před 7 měsíci +2

      There are literally no arguments against playing paper, not even challice checking. You get up and never play that person again and that's it.

    • @drew-id
      @drew-id Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@@ldgariusthis is the vast difference between people who play this as a game. And people who think it's a competitive sport.

    • @PoeticMistakes
      @PoeticMistakes Před 3 měsíci

      @@ldgariuscost? the price of magic cards seems like a pretty great argument

  • @actuallogic6411
    @actuallogic6411 Před 2 lety +4

    You don't need a costume to make a dachshund look regal! Love those dogs!

  • @Nerd_Detective
    @Nerd_Detective Před 2 lety +12

    I think it's scummy to try to manipulate your opponent into missing a trigger. It's one thing if they miss it. It's another if you're playing tactical mind games trying to CAUSE them to miss it.

  • @nathanielb5659
    @nathanielb5659 Před 2 lety +2

    the prowess triggers from a 1 drop (mutagenics) mentioned at about 4:20 won me my second match of my last modern FNM, thank Garfield for on cast triggers

    • @GumballMachinery
      @GumballMachinery Před 2 lety

      I've played lots of prowess decks over the years and that cast trigger is seriously a lifesaver!!!

  • @jadedflames
    @jadedflames Před rokem +1

    Wasn’t a chalice check, but I played against a guy at a GP who was playing scapeshift. All of his basics and all of his scapeshifts were in Japanese.
    I cast thoughtseize, he lays his hand on the table, lands above, targets below. But he puts his scapeshift in with the basic lands, and underneath a forest, so all that is poking out is the first character of the card name.
    I actually fell for it, selected something else, realized what happened as he was picking up his cards, called a judge, and the judge didn’t ding him. Six years later and I’m still mad at that judge for not calling him on that. He won that game.

    • @russellhumphrey5209
      @russellhumphrey5209 Před rokem +1

      I really think there should be a level of "You know what you are doing" penalty. Like just treat all instances like that and bad judge calls as intentional cheating. "But judg-" "No Im not playing that game, that's a warning."

  • @tcsmagicbox
    @tcsmagicbox Před 2 lety +2

    Once during FNM I forgot what my own cards do, where I mistaken "look at the top 3 and put it back in any order" with "look at the top 3 and put one in your hand", and my opponent caught me. I was like, I wasn't trying to cheat, honest.

  • @Auron3991
    @Auron3991 Před 2 lety +1

    I'll admit, I'll kind-of chalice check (I just remind them before it's missed) in the middle of a priority hold to see where my opponent's focus is. Mostly so I know if I need to remind them of their triggers that benefit me.

  • @alecolson8360
    @alecolson8360 Před 2 lety +1

    Great storytime, I liked it

  • @SockisS
    @SockisS Před 2 lety +2

    This story makes me think of this one guy I played against who called a judge because I didn't announce the life I gained from my lifelink creature. His reasoning was that I missed a trigger by not saying this, of course the judge was with me on this and nothing came of it more than a boring match.

  • @xPhireLight
    @xPhireLight Před 7 měsíci +1

    jokingly chalice checked a player in a lost game before i scooped. he had a chalice tattoo sleeve up his arm, he did not fail to point to his chalice in play. great guy.

  • @ma9ical1
    @ma9ical1 Před 2 lety +2

    Stax player complaining about scummy opponent, it made me chuckle

  • @jewski6852
    @jewski6852 Před rokem +5

    Chalice checking is not cheating, but taking advantage of your sick opponent is

    • @andrewdesalvatore7262
      @andrewdesalvatore7262 Před 6 měsíci

      I would STRONGLY consider it cheating... you're ignoring it's effect. Chalice says "COUNTER THAT SPELL". The effect is automatic and requires no-Owner input for it's effect to go off.
      It does NOT say "owner MAY counter spell".
      Why play a game if you're just gonna ignore the rules?... the officialbook rules, and/or the rules set by the cards-on-field.

    • @jewski6852
      @jewski6852 Před 6 měsíci

      @andrewdesalvatore7262 you're allowed to cast spells into the chalice. In the rule book of the game, the owner of the permanent is the sole person responsible for remembering the chosen trigger. Actual cheating, or illegal play would be casting path into a sanctum prelate on one, or casting a path on the opponents turn when they have a teferi time raveller

  • @blackfang500
    @blackfang500 Před 2 lety

    Well thanks for the warning about chalice, I'm working on my first legacy deck with chalice of the void in it.

  • @SupremeVerdict
    @SupremeVerdict Před 2 lety +4

    It doesn't even have a "may" in the counter. It just says to do it. If I l was being mauled by a puma, my opponent should still not be able to cast cards and have them resolve. It is also beyond scummy if you win by doing this. It goes against the spirit of the game.

    • @TheShalestorm
      @TheShalestorm Před 2 lety

      I'm of just the same mind. show me anywhere in a MTGO game that you can recreate this :P
      Show me anywhere in a goldfish test draw that you can do this.
      Show me against an optimal playing opp, WHERE YOU CAN DO THIS.
      i may hold stacking cards in my head far far above this in severity but this is still super scrummy.

  • @konstanten3270
    @konstanten3270 Před 2 lety +2

    I would never chalice check when someone had a asthma attack; doing it when the opponent has a medical emergency that hampers breathing makes it so difficult for them to reply "alright"

  • @gilliganallmighty3
    @gilliganallmighty3 Před 2 lety +3

    as long as it isn't an irreversible action, my casual playgroup pretty much automatically will retroactively correct a missed Chalice trigger. we are testing the decks, amd having fun. the only stakes involved in the game is usually looser has to grab snacks amd drinks from the kitchen.
    that's where I like chess. You hear of instances all over where ranked players playing are under the weather the opponent will accept a draw.

  • @austinwoodhouse2584
    @austinwoodhouse2584 Před 2 lety +32

    Yeah, the timing is a bit scummy. Overall checking your opponent to make sure that they know their own deck, through making sure they remember triggers or forcing them to prove to you that they kill you with their combo, is important. I've always felt that deck knowledge is very important and you wont get better if you have some games you lose because you forgot a trigger or two, it's part of learning to play this game.

    • @DahVoozel
      @DahVoozel Před 2 lety +2

      When your combo is dependent on layers resolving before a target to a triggered ability is declared it does help to have the rule ls citation bookmarked.

    • @V2ULTRAKill
      @V2ULTRAKill Před 2 lety

      Well it depends
      If my wgd loop starts uncontested in anje for example
      Theres no need to prove i kill beyond pulling out 3 cards from my deck because i have a true infinite loop that does not end until i ein

    • @alilhard
      @alilhard Před rokem

      @@V2ULTRAKill Well no, it is important for them to check if you do kill them. Just having infinite mana (or card draw for that matter) doesn't mean you win, it just means you pulled a combo and now you may be in position to kill. Infinite mana with nothing to sink it in is pertty much useless. Infinite card draw with no possible interaction means you would just deck yourself, and so on.

    • @V2ULTRAKill
      @V2ULTRAKill Před rokem

      @@alilhard again
      If the loop resolves the worst possible outcome i can have is a draw
      It is an ACTUAL infinite not a loop that can be repeated infinitely, a loop that does not end unless force stopped or the game ends
      Unless I kill, the game draws
      There is zero point in running a true infinite without a kill, and madness has zero mana spell recursion
      Anje is fundamentally a deck that wins by playing the loop

    • @alilhard
      @alilhard Před rokem

      @@V2ULTRAKill Ok, so you mean to tell me that if I have only worldgorger in the yard and I play animate dead you scoop no matter boardstate ? Not taking the piss, just explaining that it's in your opponent's best interest to check "from here, do you win the game, do you have a way to win the game from this boardstate ?"

  • @kennethacuna9996
    @kennethacuna9996 Před 2 lety +3

    Chalice checking when you're coughing and wheezing?
    This is not a combat sport where you need to
    "PROTECT YOURSELF AT ALL TIMES"

  • @whatwas44
    @whatwas44 Před 2 lety +1

    As an on and off MUD legacy player since 2012, I have been hit with chalice checks more so than most in my community. When people do this they usually have an over friendly/casual personality until they check your chalice. It definitely gets you down over time at your event. I've done the same thing, in fact, I started typing this before you even got to your mood snaps.

  • @jamthemedic8113
    @jamthemedic8113 Před 2 lety +5

    Due to playing control decks frequently, any sort of attempt to cast while a player is otherwise preoccupied is pretty bad manners. 1 too many times have I played a commander game where players skip from End step to next players main step when I had wanted to cast something in the end step.
    Just don't be that guy. You'll just ruin your reputation in your local community and nobody will play with you. That's when you truly lose at MTG.

  • @Ryekenhoshin23
    @Ryekenhoshin23 Před 2 lety +1

    I’m trying to remember which tournament it was but it was pre-Covid and a judge ruled that it is also the responsibility of the opponent to make sure their opponent is keeping track of their triggers, they penalized that individual with unsportsmanlike conduct.
    It’s on CZcams here if I remember correctly so if I can find it I’ll share the link!

  • @LucyBean42
    @LucyBean42 Před 2 lety +1

    I had a situation at a PTQ that I feel really bad about. I play very robotically and enunciate everything, steps phases triggers, resolutions, EVERYTHING. I was on dredge, and when I Life from the Loam'D, I accidentally picked it back up with the 3 lands. I realized now that I put the 3 lands on top of it and didn't think, and when my opponent called judge, I didnt dispute it at all. It was my mistake, and I was going to take the loss if it came down to it. I got a warning overall and reverted the game state. I won the match overall, but I feel like my opponent thought I was cheating the whole time, using my robotic play patterns to hide it. It feels bad to be accused of cheating when you really didn't mean to do an illegal play pattern.

  • @tocu98
    @tocu98 Před 2 lety +1

    I think the end of what you said on the story of giving the benefit of the doubt feels fairly correct. You know you were off in a negative space the cursing out your friend and knowing you were off is certainly a good sign. My default post Yuuya and Saito but more so Yuuya as he was one of the best regarded players is to report the concern to the judge so they can have it documented if its a 1 off nothing happens if its a history thats it can get addressed. While that is my default if it was just the player being kinda not pleasant and seemingly angle shooting that wouldnt move me off it, the barking at a friend thats when I would be on the fence.

  • @ScorpioneOrzion
    @ScorpioneOrzion Před 2 lety +1

    Chalice + a way to move counters is a fun thing to do :P

  • @stevenfairhaven6388
    @stevenfairhaven6388 Před 2 lety

    It’s not your job to make sure someone does the checking but if I were playing sportsmanship would dictate I would play a card that would need to be checked nothing I hope that my appointment would forget and I don’t know why I would play it knowing that he did have a Chalice check but I probably would remind them otherwise why even play it. Also I enjoy your your content so much keep it up please you and the professor or so witty at times it’s amazing so thank you for a little bit of joy in my day when I get to watch what you guys do and what you do thank you

  • @swordgeo
    @swordgeo Před 6 měsíci

    One tournament my friend is in, opp casts some kind of tutor, shuffles his deck, offers the deck for my friend to shuffle.
    Calls the judge that my friend is illegally shuffling his deck. Judge ruled against my friend because the guy sneakily SLIPPED the tutor back into the deck so it wasn’t in the graveyard!

  • @MechWolf666
    @MechWolf666 Před 6 měsíci +1

    What you described is as bad as if I mid yugioh match opponent is choking and I go for all my effects when he needs a moment so I don't have to worry about response in yugioh ... kinda a prick move and definitely if as for the example someone is in danger of some sort

  • @Jodor--
    @Jodor-- Před 2 lety +1

    GP Birmingham I bought a u/w control deck for it missed out on day 2 and played one more causal event and not played legacy since. The deck is still siting in my desk lol

  • @magicpokey4922
    @magicpokey4922 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Late to the party on this one but the scummiest opponent I ever played against was at my LGS for FNM. I think this was like New Phyrexia standard? So a while ago. Anyway, dude had a weird multicolor spells/burn deck that wasn't anything to write home about, Mostly burn spells and card draw and land searching.
    He burned me out on game 1 and then proceeded to side in 15 spells that all had the words 'shuffle your library' on them. He proceeded to waste the ENTIRE REST OF THE ROUND (still in game 2) by shuffling as slow as possible over and over again. When I called a judge for OBVIOUS slow play I was informed that we had needed an eighth player for the fnm to fire so the guy I was playing against was technically the judge for the evening. Of course he refused to give himself a warning for slow play and successfully ran out the time (and the 5 turns) to 'win' the match 1/0.
    Needless to say I reported him to wizards and lodged a complaint. And within a year this guy had his judge qualifications revoked. Mainly because he did scummy shit like this all the time. Especially against new players most of whom dropped the game after their first FNM because he was so toxic.
    That store is under new management now, but damn I still get steamed from that night.

  • @hashtag3073
    @hashtag3073 Před 2 lety

    good timing, i just got my chalices in the mail today.

  • @TheDocperian
    @TheDocperian Před 9 měsíci

    I have a friend who used to play a ton of Modern UB Mill. One FNM (I think it was for the stores 10y anniversary) I was playing down the table from him and I notice his opponent, clearly tilted after game 1, leave to talk to the store clerk. They talk for a bit, then the opp comes back and they finish siding.
    We later learn from the clerk that he asked for some basics, clearly intending to pull from the draft rule "you have unlimited basics in your side" to increase his deck size vs mill. "Can I get some basics" has been a meme in the group since.

  • @TraeKryzer
    @TraeKryzer Před 2 lety

    *He's having a stroke
    "Bolt that man!"

  • @kev_whatev
    @kev_whatev Před 6 měsíci

    What a long walk to get to something that ultimately didn’t matter

  • @dalevanvleet9357
    @dalevanvleet9357 Před 2 lety

    I had a fun one in a SCG event. Was playing quest for the holy relic in the standard format at the time. My opponent here was on o e of the blue green ramp variants. I casted a Kor skyfisher with a quest on 3 in play.. my opponent asked what I was picking up. To this I motioned to grab a card on instinct and stopped to say "before that" and went to change the counters on quest. Of course they stopped me, and said we could call a judge. While miffed I declined and moved on proceeding to take this game one as they only set me back by maybe a turn. Karma did it's work for me here though as they I game 3 took a while on choosing the frost titan trigger. He chose wrong leaving my mirran crusader untapped and his only blocker as an avenger of zendikar. I get to slam a sandbagged Darksteel axe on my following turn killing him from 8 with that same crusader.

  • @patarfuifui
    @patarfuifui Před 2 lety +16

    I personally sold my copies of Chalice of the Void because I was tired of people angle shooting even at FNM level events. If I play Chalice it's just gonna be on MODO.

  • @TheHuntersKnife
    @TheHuntersKnife Před 2 lety +4

    I feel like chalice checking is scummy in general. and saying okay when your opponent casts a spell to that i don’t have a response but the on board responses should just be evident. If your oppponent is shitty enough to ignore the board state and try to resolve spells then yes they’re scummy.

    • @kylejoly577
      @kylejoly577 Před 2 lety

      Pretty much you just chalice check if its all you have left to try. Your opponent still needs to be on their game. If its concede or chalice check them, you go for it at Comp REL.

  • @jacefairis1289
    @jacefairis1289 Před 2 lety +4

    it's not cheating, but it's absolutely scumbag angle shooting

  • @LucasBuilds
    @LucasBuilds Před 7 měsíci +1

    My own angle shooting experience is pretty recent-- my LGS was having a friendly Commander tournament against another store in the area, and I went along partly as our spare (I'd placed 5th in the mini-tournament to decide on our team of 4, which sounds impressive until I also mention there were 5 entries total) and partly to get some games in with anyone else who showed up. Ended up being me and two other guys from Neither store-- one of whom was new to the game, one of whom was Not.
    like if you've a MtG tattoo (he had a pretty good-sized Vraska on his arm), I'm gonna assume you're familiar enough with the game to be aware that the legend rule does *not* go on the stack and that once a creature resolves, it's a permanent and not a spell.
    So anyway, I'm playing Izzet Pirates, newbie was playing a mono green prebuilt deck sold by another local store (which had earl of squirrel as a win con, not sure what the deal was there-- I found this out when I Windfalled him and had to explain silver borders), and vraska tat is playing Koma, but with Marit Lage as secret commander. He gets out the Dark Depths and Thespian Stage combo, stages to Dark Depths...
    And then attempts to transform thespian stage in response to the legend rule, leaving Dark Depths in play AND giving him a marit lage. A couple turns after I explain how that actually works, he attempts to Double Major his marit lage and seems openly suspicious when I explain spell vs. permanent and that it's not a valid target as it's already in play.
    At that point, I honestly believe that assuming he's trying to get one over on me IS giving him the benefit of the doubt, because the alternative is assuming he's just Profoundly Stupid.

  • @zacharymangen754
    @zacharymangen754 Před 2 lety

    I was play mono red prison in legacy for the first time and round 1 I place chalice on one and I forgot about it my opponent cast 3-4 one mana spells that resolved because I forgot about the triggers. It was my first time playing legacy in paper I was nervous it happened. My op told me what happened after the match and I just kicked myself for my mistake I don’t think I’ve ever missed a trigger since a real learning experience.

  • @babyplaneswalker341
    @babyplaneswalker341 Před 2 lety

    I remember when obzedat/whip of erebos was im standard back when theros released. Some big tourny ruled that obzedat could exile himself even tho the whip said thay if the card would leave the battlefield (this exiling itself), then it is exiled instead (meaning the whip triggers to exile it changing which effect/card exiled it). That deck was a top tier deck because of that ruling even tho my lgs called wizards of the coast MULTIPLE times for a rules check and every single time they responded with 'yes. Whip would exile him and he wouldnt return BUT because it was ruled the other way around at (big tourny). We have to go by that ruling'

    • @thunderbug8640
      @thunderbug8640 Před 2 lety

      I don’t see a problem with the Obzedat rule tbh. The wording on the Whip makes it possible as it’s a replacement effect and won’t take effect, "exile it instead of putting it anywhere else" but it’s already being exiled by own ability so the whip doesn’t need to "do" anything. Same thing was true of Rest in Peace + Obzedat or Aetherling.

  • @Rubiks007
    @Rubiks007 Před rokem

    Back around M14 standard. I was at a standard GP, my opponent was on aetherling + Sphinxs rev. In play I have the owl that’s counter instant or sorcery unless they pay 1. So my opponent goes “cast sphinxs rev” doesn’t say anything or tap any lands, I say “ok” then he taps all his mana not leaving the 1 open to play around my owl. So I try to respond to him tapping, but a judge stepped in and said I can’t because I already said “ok” when he announced the spell. It felt super scummy i dropped the tournament right there.

  • @JohnELSmith
    @JohnELSmith Před rokem

    in 1996 i ran a R/G speed deck with kird ape, tinder wall, orcish lumberjack, erhnam djinn, juggernaut, lightning bolt, giant growth, berserk, taiga, etc, deck was crushing it for 2+ years, usually W by turn 4
    i was disqualified one time for forgetting to grant an opponent's creature forestwalk ONE time lol xD
    never went back to that LGS

  • @josephsorensen6278
    @josephsorensen6278 Před rokem

    how do we feel about triggered abilities that are world effects like say oath of druids, i feel like its still on the owner of the card?

  • @posisteve
    @posisteve Před rokem

    while playing a feature match vs Sullivan, Patrick I think, Magic Fest Niagara Falls feature match, I hit a chalice on 1 t1 with my cloudpost deck. he lightning fast went plains, aether vial, go.... I missed it. eventually he got me in a close one, then beat me game 3 in turns. I'm not a pro and never knew about this technique, but it cost me my feature match. next round I got crushed by dark depths god draws that my deck really can't beat.

  • @jedstanaland2897
    @jedstanaland2897 Před rokem

    I had the candelabra of Twanos and I was using it correctly but one of my opponents kept saying that I had an infinite combo because I simply had the urzatron. I explained to him that while I could pay × and tap it then untap my lands then retap them it wouldn't go any further than one cycle. He was emphatic that I could simply pay × and untap my lands but I could only do in in cycle and it didn't require me to tap the candelabra. I was nice enough to point out that it was something that is known as a mono artifact. Those don't exist anymore in the game itself and when they did they were under the rules text of only once per turn or tap me as part of my costs.

  • @jtelm157
    @jtelm157 Před 2 lety

    I definitely wait to play cards until my opponents aren't paying attention but that's on for my un-set deck that has cards that you can sneak in...

  • @vivianm1851
    @vivianm1851 Před 7 měsíci +1

    eh honestly I think that the game working differently because a player "forgets" feels quite a bit like the whole reason that manual dexterity cards are banned. Though as you said it is unlikely to affect 99% of my games since I don't play competitively I don't like it as a concept even. In an ideal world both players should keep track of the game state and remind each other when something would be able to trigger. But then you run into a hard to enforce thing maybe just give both players a warning for failure to maintain game state and attempt to rectify the situation but again that is way more hands on than should be necessary.

  • @deepbreeze9058
    @deepbreeze9058 Před 2 lety +2

    Ludicrous! Everyone knows the correct sequencing for a Chalice check is after a kick in the balls...

    • @einstein951
      @einstein951 Před 2 lety +2

      "I kick you in the balls"
      Opponent, on the floor wheezing in pain: "... chalice"

  • @ryanvm9728
    @ryanvm9728 Před 2 lety +1

    Whenever I play against a Chalice deck, I almost always end up playing a spell into it; not because I'm Chalice checking, I'm just that dumb, lol!

  • @bjrice3155
    @bjrice3155 Před 2 lety

    My experience wasn’t any specific action, more of an overall experience. I had met up with a friend at the LGS for a few rounds of Commander. After he left, played against a random guy who had introduced himself while my friend and I were playing. I was still new to the format, playing with an untuned deck. This guy had a Markov Eminence deck. He played like he was going for the title. He was clearly in the lead, yet he didn’t hesitate to repeatedly devastate everything from board state to my land base. Mind you, this was a random & casual game. Dissuaded me from playing with strangers for a while.

  • @Hel1mutt
    @Hel1mutt Před 2 lety

    I have a buddy that kinda does stuff like that, he doesnt necessarily play cards when we are distracted but he will just cast stuff and not announce it and leave it on the board even if someone had an answer. He really bothers me but i didnt really know why until now, i dont really play with him anymore.

  • @speaksincircles
    @speaksincircles Před 2 lety

    I had a situation where I defeated a supposed friend in a game of pioneer. I left right after the match since it was the last round. And he reported the match as a draw.
    I would have been in 4th place and revived some credit, but he screwed my record and left me empty handed.
    Not something worth confronting, but he’s lost my trust and any positive regard I had for him.

  • @user-ep8ns6hg4q
    @user-ep8ns6hg4q Před 9 měsíci

    Haven't read it in a very long time, but the comprehensive rulebook used to specifically and very clearly state that it was the responsibility of BOTH players to remind of any triggers, regardless of who owns them, it is supposed to be about sportsmanship not try to sneak in wins that you don't deserve from ignoring triggers that have no choice, if in a tournament and a trigger is missed/ignored both players could be punished equally.

    • @OceanicBacon
      @OceanicBacon Před 7 měsíci

      That used to be the case but they changed the rule in 2013, now you don’t have to remind your opponent about their triggers if you don’t want to

  • @danw.1250
    @danw.1250 Před 2 lety

    lol, I Chalice check myself on the regular. I'm constantly casting kicked Tide Shapers into a Chalice on 1.

  • @qedsoku849
    @qedsoku849 Před 7 měsíci

    In Yugioh, mandatory abilities are both player's responsibility to track, Yugioh really doesn't want those to be missed, if a mandatory trigger is missed, the game rewinds back to when the mandatory trigger should have activated (if it hasn't been long enough that rewinding isn't possible), and both players are penalized for missing it, so Yugioh avoids this specific situation almost entirely.

    • @erfarkrasnobay
      @erfarkrasnobay Před 7 měsíci +1

      It was so at magic and that rule are removed because of how miserable expirience of reminding to opponent their beneficial triggers under threat of penalty, and how bad situations for judges was when both players forget about trigger. Now you could even skip announcment of triggers that not change visible boardstate, untill they relevant (for example, prowess triggers are important only at assigning damage)

  • @winkelfilms
    @winkelfilms Před 2 lety

    Back when I was a young teenager when I just first got into magic, I was at an FNM against this opponent that would cut my deck but would look at the card as he's cutting. Me being a young dimwit, didn't think this was against the rules because I was new at the game and I didn't challenge him.
    He would cut the deck, angle the visible card towards himself and if he didn't like what he saw, that's where he would cut.

  • @Ulim151
    @Ulim151 Před 2 lety +1

    This was with pokemon but it was similar. I just passed the turn and got called away and the opponent just continued to play alone without me being there which is just a big asshole move even when pokemon doesnt have things like instants that you can play on your opponents turn.

  • @S4ltyTar0
    @S4ltyTar0 Před 2 lety

    Reminds me of a guy who comes to every FNM at my LGC. He gets visibly angry and growls when he has to mulligan and groans and rolls his eyes whenever you counter a spell or remove one of his big threats. It's fine to run into an opponent like this every once in a while but he does it every single week, every single game, no one wants to be matched up with him because he doesn't talk, doesn't banter, just sits there silently and growls, scowls and groans and it's just not a fun experience.

    • @mathewshaw1111
      @mathewshaw1111 Před 2 lety

      If it's a club and no one wants to play against him, ask him to play elsewhere.

  • @Raszero
    @Raszero Před 2 lety

    Jesus Christ, fellow asthmatic here but that's crazy. I did immediately think unsportsman conduct but you cant remember your meds, your triggers and judge calls at the same time!

  • @darrinschlangen4119
    @darrinschlangen4119 Před 2 lety

    That is terrible behavior. Unfortunately, people try that garbage all the time in tournaments. People have tried to get me to miss triggers while distracted, too. With me it involved cards like Aether Vial or Gods Willing in my hand that my opponent knew I had.

  • @PuppyErynn
    @PuppyErynn Před 2 lety

    i play mono g tron in modern at fnm and this happens every single time i play lol. i think the trouble is, is that I do tend to miss triggers or forget about things like my own trinisphere taxing me etc which is linked to me having adhd. Some opponents do purposefully take advantage of it, some dont and theyre kind, but the ones that do take it to the extreme, even just during a practice game before FNM has even started. Things like casting a ragavan for its dash when chalice is on one, or tapping a fetchland for mana when they have no fetchable targets, evoking a solitude when a torpor orb is out; just small things that they do to see what slips by me cus they know i forget sometimes. Its extremely tiring tbh, but we'll see who's really having fun when i rock up with prison tron next week : )

  • @jamierutledge1355
    @jamierutledge1355 Před 6 měsíci

    I had an opponent cough in my face at a gp and the judge told me he couldn’t ask the guy to not do a bodily function. The fifth time of saying stop I scooped and went back to the hotel

  • @mella4376
    @mella4376 Před 2 lety +1

    Turns out tarring and feathering angle shooters to send a message is indeed "based" and "praxis".

  • @tvicious88
    @tvicious88 Před 2 lety

    At a modern PPTQ back in 2017 I was playing my win and in to top8 on Hardened Scales. I was facing Titan Shift which is a pretty difficult matchup if they can answer my early aggression. Win g1, lose g2 and have him DOB g3. I pass the turn and at the same time my son approaches the table (10yr old) to say goodbye as his mom came to pick him up since he had lost out and was getting bored. I turn my back to hug him and when I turn around the OP has their hand up and is calling judge. Flustered and confused I ask him what’s going on. “Oh I went to draw and I accidentally saw the top two.” Still visibly confused I let the judge do his thing. His thing ends up being asking the guy what his draw was and which card he saw and then some shuffling happens. My op casts explore into scape shift and kills me…. Interesting the 2nd card in his library mattered.
    I saw him pull the same stunt a month ago at FNM with a grist plus trigger. Cheating to look for outs….at FNM. Why bother playing if you feel you have to cheat to win. What’s a win worth then??

  • @Mangowhere92
    @Mangowhere92 Před 2 lety

    Had a player playing a modern deck (Krark-Clan Ironworks) call for judge to do a deck check on a boggles player who played Leyline of sanctity mainboard . This was a weekly modern game (not competitive ) by a LGS.
    After the owner verified that the player did infact play leyline of sanctity mainboard and he did not break any rule , they continued playing with the salty player telling his opponent “ you need to pay for my entry fee”

  • @M4gl4d
    @M4gl4d Před rokem

    My scummiest opponent ever was a tier 2 DCI judge. I casted an spell that said "each player chooses a basic land of each type he controls and sacrifices the rest" and he argued that he would choose his dual lands since they had basic land types on them. And he was a t2 judge so he knew better.
    Yes, he could choose dual lands, but if he chose two underground rivers, once for each land type. I'm fairly sure he could not.

  • @Akla1601
    @Akla1601 Před 2 lety

    This is a weird one. My first modern side event at a GP I cast Remand on someone's Abrupt Decay not realizing that the card said that it can't be countered and then the next untap my opponent called a judge saying that we had resolved those card incorrectly. The judge ended up siding with my opponent and gave me a game loss because I didn't know what my opponents cards did. What do you think? Should I have taken the game loss there?

    • @Kakerate2
      @Kakerate2 Před rokem

      thats a mistake ive made myself, ridiculous ruling by the judge for sure.

  • @pikachupokemon2203
    @pikachupokemon2203 Před 2 lety +1

    Omg more on the dog outfits!