Chris Taylor
Contributor
Angle shooting and the like have always been a contentious topic in magic, one which I tend to treat with the attitude of "Oh man, that's neat. Never do that again" but I love seeing the stories of these weird exploits.
Here's 3 articles which came up in the wake of the Kentroversy which provide some takes on this, the one of which I loved most is Jeff Hoogland's pile o examples:
http://www.channelfireball.com/articles/the-cheating-isnt-the-only-problem/
http://www.gatheringmagic.com/andrewjessup-11072016-opening-a-dialogue-on-ethics/
http://www.jeffhoogland.com/2016/11/magic-the-savaging/ <---This one
I think my favorite (Though not actually allowed in current magic, since you can't ask for priority without the intent to do anything) is
Opponent's main phase: Hey can I have priority?
Opp: Sure, what are you doing?
"Passing priority. You're now in your combat phase."
Or the good old:
Play rampant growth. Put rampant growth in graveyard, pick up deck to find basic land. Get DQ'd because rampant growth being in your graveyard means it's already resolved, and you're just looking at your deck for no reason.
Lots of interesting case studies in the comments of Hoogland's article
Here's 3 articles which came up in the wake of the Kentroversy which provide some takes on this, the one of which I loved most is Jeff Hoogland's pile o examples:
http://www.channelfireball.com/articles/the-cheating-isnt-the-only-problem/
http://www.gatheringmagic.com/andrewjessup-11072016-opening-a-dialogue-on-ethics/
http://www.jeffhoogland.com/2016/11/magic-the-savaging/ <---This one
I think my favorite (Though not actually allowed in current magic, since you can't ask for priority without the intent to do anything) is
Opponent's main phase: Hey can I have priority?
Opp: Sure, what are you doing?
"Passing priority. You're now in your combat phase."
Or the good old:
Play rampant growth. Put rampant growth in graveyard, pick up deck to find basic land. Get DQ'd because rampant growth being in your graveyard means it's already resolved, and you're just looking at your deck for no reason.
Lots of interesting case studies in the comments of Hoogland's article