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The main problem I have with the responding to own action on drawing is that it's too easy for people to just manipulate it. Say my opponent and I are both drawing off of my mayhem, he draws his 6 faster than me and throws down mayhem, unsatisfied with his hand. At about the same time I finish drawing and start looking at my hand and notice SOG/NJ. I had no intention of playing it at that time, but I don't want to lose it without getting my souls so I play it using responding to own action as the precedence. There's nothing my opponent can do. Technically I just cheated, but there's no way to prove it.
That's how I'm reading the posts in all similar threads, Prof's post, and just the courtesy you'd want afforded back to you in the other situation.
priority/chains/stacks?
The problem resides in how long the "respond to own action" period lasts. To me if I see my opponent look at his hand and not immediately motion to grab a card, it's over. To other's they get a couple seconds. And what if that card they were motioning for wasn't a dom? Now they got to play a card that I didn't want them playing, but I gave them the grace period thinking it was a Dom. and if i play it before all that then they can suddenly decide to play doms they had no intention of playing until they found out they had to shuffle them away.
Almost every experienced player I know asks, "Do I have initiative?" when they have a character in battle specifically to allow their opponent to play CM or AotL if they want. All of the players who don't ask have gotten bitten by a wasted Dom
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My Sabbath Breaker has been AotL'd far more times than I've had a Grey battlewinner in hand, simply by asking for inish.
Turn player always retains priority to respond to their own action first before passing it to their opponent.
QuoteTurn player always retains priority to respond to their own action first before passing it to their opponent.
Quote from: RTSmaniac on March 20, 2012, 10:59:52 AMQuoteTurn player always retains priority to respond to their own action first before passing it to their opponent.The question is how to prevent the abuse of this in tournament play from both sides of the table.