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In the case of searching, there is no way to tell if your opponent was fortunate and really did draw all of their dominants right away, or if they got SoG/NJ right away because of Zaccheus and Consider the Lilies.
Quote from: Professoralstad on January 19, 2012, 01:01:16 PMIn the case of searching, there is no way to tell if your opponent was fortunate and really did draw all of their dominants right away, or if they got SoG/NJ right away because of Zaccheus and Consider the Lilies. Is there a new Zaccheus coming out? Because I am curious how Zaccheus can search for SoG or NJ? The only other option for using Zaccheus as an example (that I can figure) is that you are referencing how someone can search, not show, and still cheat.
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Quote from: soul seeker on January 19, 2012, 01:56:50 PMQuote from: Professoralstad on January 19, 2012, 01:01:16 PMIn the case of searching, there is no way to tell if your opponent was fortunate and really did draw all of their dominants right away, or if they got SoG/NJ right away because of Zaccheus and Consider the Lilies. Is there a new Zaccheus coming out? Because I am curious how Zaccheus can search for SoG or NJ? The only other option for using Zaccheus as an example (that I can figure) is that you are referencing how someone can search, not show, and still cheat.I think that was his point. You can prove if your opponent is cheating with Lost Souls, but can't prove that he's cheating with searches, unless there's a reveal rule.
You can suspect your opponent is cheating with Lost Souls. You can't prove it until you see the cards.
The flaw I see in MJB's example of potential cheating is that if a player is that it would be very easy to catch them. If people don't seem to be drawing Lost Souls, any ability that allows me to search my opponent's deck will clue me in that there's a few souls short.
If I ever lose a tournament game because of apparent soul drought, I will usually check my opponent's deck to see if there were enough included;
I don't think the rule is very complicated, and I think there are plenty of legitimate reasons it should remain the way it is, although I certainly see the other side of the coin as well.
QuoteI don't think the rule is very complicated, and I think there are plenty of legitimate reasons it should remain the way it is, although I certainly see the other side of the coin as well.I agree with this. I just don't think that "cheaters will always cheat" is one of those legitimate reasons.
Situation: Taking a test filling out the periodic table. You are told to do it from memory. There is a poster of the periodic table hanging right up front of the class.Is it fair to have that sort of availability for the students to use, even though it would be cheating? Would it not be better to remove the opportunity for easy cheating?
Quote from: Minister Polarius on January 19, 2012, 08:59:54 PMSituation: Taking a test filling out the periodic table. You are told to do it from memory. There is a poster of the periodic table hanging right up front of the class.Is it fair to have that sort of availability for the students to use, even though it would be cheating? Would it not be better to remove the opportunity for easy cheating?I guess so. So I take it from this analogy that you want me to add you to the list of people who are in favor of revealing every single card that you might add to your hand. That would surely remove the opportunity to "forget" to place a Lost Soul in play.
That would surely remove the opportunity to "forget" to place a Lost Soul in play.
Expecting students not to look at a full periodical table poster hung in full view is unreasonable. Expecting students not to have a piece of paper with the same printed on it hidden under their watch is reasonable. I support the status quo: reveal specific cards searched for, don't reveal cards gotten by Search or False Peace.
I'm not sure I understand how displaying other ways to cheat is an argument against helping prevent certain ways to cheat.
FTR, I am not in favor of changing the rule that has been in effect since I came to the boards, which has already been reiterated by an elder.
Why is this suddenly being debated?
In the same way, hiding Lost Souls in your hand or Art Pile can be discovered by seeing or randomly hitting it from either, searching deck and realizing the number of souls don't add up, etc.
Hidding souls is not an issue because A) its easy to discover and B) if you did you just lost. So go right ahead and hide souls in your hand because when I look at it with Damsel not only to I get to draw but its gg for me.
Putting aside the fact that I can hide souls in my artifact pile (which is probably what I would do if I were cheating), how many times did you look at my hand in the game we played last Saturday? Precisely zero. What were the chances you were you ever going to block Joseph or Benjamin with Damsel just to get a glimpse at my hand? Almost precisely zero. (And lastly--given that there were always LS available in our game what is the chance I *was* cheating this way? Zero, unless I was really bad at it.) So yeah--it is so easy to discover that players never take the steps to actually do so.
I'm just offering ways to simplify what is already a very complex game.
I find it ironic, and somewhat unsettling, that you guys are debating how to successfully get away with cheating.