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Here we go again. Declaring Accel v. Cancelling EM
Posted: Sat Sep 19, 2009 5:50 pm
by chazrobbins
Ok, we got the ruling that declaring Emergency Deceleration comes BEFORE declaring acceleration at the beginning of an impulse (thanks Mike).
Next question:
When does declaring cancelling EM occur in relation to declaring cancellation of Evasive Manouvers? (Yes, these questions are really and truly coming up in our games.)
Thanks,
Chuck
Game Empire Pasadena
Posted: Sat Sep 19, 2009 6:27 pm
by Savedfromwhat
I am not sure i understand can you re-explain the problem
Re: Here we go again. Declaring Accel v. Cancelling EM
Posted: Sat Sep 19, 2009 8:31 pm
by Kang
chazrobbins wrote:
When does declaring cancelling EM occur in relation to declaring cancellation of Evasive Manouvers? (Yes, these questions are really and truly coming up in our games.)
I think you meant cancelling EM in relation to ED.
As far as I can see, the rules make no reference to the order in which these steps are carried out/announced. Neither do the Player Reference Cards, which as you know carry the Impulse Procedure ready reference charts.
The only place I can see these two functions differentiated is, once again, in the MITS cards from
Orion Attack - as also referred to in the original post. In these, cancelling Emer Decel comes before Erratic Maneuvers.
But I don't know where the Murfreesbro guys got that order of play from.
Let's see what Mike says.
Posted: Sat Sep 19, 2009 9:29 pm
by chazrobbins
Savedfromwhat wrote:I am not sure i understand can you re-explain the problem
My opponent was using EM. At the beginning of an impulse, I asked her if she was going to continue EM. She said she would decide once I announced whether I was accelerating or not. The rules are not clear on this.
So that's the question: Does she announce cancellation of EM before or after announcing acceleration?
We have already seen Mike say that Emergency Deceleration must be declared before Acceleration. Is the same true for declaring cancellation of EM?
Posted: Sun Sep 20, 2009 2:12 am
by Hod K'el
EM is always in 'OTHER'. Do it / stop it in 'OTHER'.
ED is at the start of the impulse.
Posted: Sun Sep 20, 2009 2:44 am
by mjwest
Let's see what Steve says. The MITS cards could easily sink my ruling.
I am trying to make sure all of these will be in the next Communique.
Posted: Sun Sep 20, 2009 3:24 am
by djdood
I still preferred the "original" name for those cards...

Posted: Sun Sep 20, 2009 6:58 am
by Kang
djdood wrote:I still preferred the "original" name for those cards...

What was that, then? We used to have a near-identical system that we simply called 'Impulse Cards'.
Anyway, to sum it up, what it looks like is that we need is a definitive sequence for all of the events in the Speed Change Phase of the impulse procedure, in a similar manner to how the Other Functions phase has been defined.
The MITS cards are excellent - I use them every game - but:
(a) they must have derived their order of play from somewhere - or perhaps not - and whatever, the rules that the MITS order of play comes from needs to be clarified and/or made 'official', although I hate that word

, and
(b) not everyone has a set of MITS cards!
(c) Even the MITS cards contain errors! Or, at least one anyway

No offence, Tony and friends!
And it also looks as if we could do with a CRUL-II

Posted: Sun Sep 20, 2009 7:07 am
by Kang
Hod K'el wrote:EM is always in 'OTHER'. Do it / stop it in 'OTHER'.
I'm not sure this is exactly correct - but you have a good point. As far as I understand it, EM is
declared in Defensive Fire, but
takes effect in Other Functions - and is
cancelled in Speed Change.
Posted: Sun Sep 20, 2009 9:11 pm
by mjwest
Kang is correct: Evasive Maneuvers are canceled in the Speed Change Phase. (EM is just weird.)
Anyway, is there anything else that takes place in the Speed Change Phase that needs to be considered, too? (Besides acceleration, ED, and canceling EM.)
Posted: Mon Sep 28, 2009 8:51 am
by DNordeen
MJ - There's nothing else that I know of happening during Speed Change.
Posted: Mon Sep 28, 2009 1:42 pm
by mjwest
As an aside on this, I have sent in the list of line items that were generated by the recent posts. I have not yet received confirmation one way or the other on the ordering in the Speed Change Phase. I will be sure to post once I get answer back, and it is most likely that the order presented on the MITS cards is the one that will be used.
(The reason is because even if that order causes undesired [to me anyway] side effects, it does work and it is in print. Better to be consistent with product in print when possible.)
Posted: Mon Sep 28, 2009 8:12 pm
by Mike
Wait a sec!
There was something about those MITS cards that was wrong. Was it the order of tractors and transporters? I think that was it. It was definitely in the wrong order from the way it was printed in the actual rulebook. I remember this coming up in a thread before and how it might have different effects. There was a scenario/situation asked about where it would definitely make a difference in the sequencing of those events.
Posted: Mon Sep 28, 2009 9:40 pm
by mjwest
I will have to go back though the MITS cards to check for errors, but having only one error is better than having two. At that point, they become as much of a hindrance as a help.
So, in light of that, the order in the Speed Change Phase is the same as given on the MITS cards:
- Declare Acceleration
- Declare Emergency Deceleration
- Cancel Evasive Maneuvers.
Yes, this reverses my prior ruling. Note that this was my recommendation to Steve after much deliberation. In this case there is nothing "broken" about the ordering on the MITS cards, so I think precident rules. My biggest error in this whole thing was not first checking the MITS cards before speaking.
Posted: Mon Sep 28, 2009 9:52 pm
by chazrobbins
mjwest wrote:it is most likely that the order presented on the MITS cards is the one that will be used.
(The reason is because even if that order causes undesired [to me anyway] side effects, it does work and it is in print. Better to be consistent with product in print when possible.)
I would hate to think that the integrity of the game would be sacrificed simply because someone printed something on the MITS cards without fully thinking out the consequences. I liked your reasoning in your original ruling regarding Emergency Deceleration because it followed a policy of avoiding "mind games" and gamesmanship. I hope that SVC makes a ruling that follows that same policy.
Chuck
Game Empire Pasadena