@Boldfresh:
so your practical solution would be to tell the defender that if he believes the attacker was intentionally abusing the rules then do not allow it, but otherwise you would urge the defender to allow the changed combat moves?
My practical solution is to use your judgment. If you can’t trust your opponent to not game the leeway, play by the letter of the rules and don’t give it in the first place.
@Boldfresh:
alright, i just saw where you say that the “definition” of the word complete is Locked in. i just have to respectfully disagree with you there. If the rules are intended to be precise on the issue, they should be so.
I’m sorry, but you’re not making sense here. “Complete” means done. (Per Webster’s Dictionary, “having all necessary parts, elements, or steps”, “brought to an end”, and “fully carried out”.) It doesn’t mean “subject to change”. I don’t see how they could be any more precise.
@Boldfresh:
It is misleading to have the statement in the rules that “the attacker may not change any combat movements or attacks after the defender has scrambled” if the combat move is “complete”, ie, locked in, when it is presented to the defender. this is contradictory, and i’m not trying to be difficult. it would be an entirely superfluous statement that could only mislead, right?
It can’t be superfluous and contradictory at the same time. I don’t see how an additional statement for emphasis that doesn’t contradict the original statement in any way can be misleading.
@Boldfresh:
by extension, would you say that if i present a move to my opponent where there are no scramble or intercept choices that is is within the defender’s rights BY RULE to not allow ANY changes to the combat move even if dice have not been rolled? by your definition of “complete” being “locked in” would that not be the inevitable conclusion?
That’s exactly correct. Once you have declared your combat movements to be complete and move on to the Conduct Combat phase, you can’t make any changes to your combat movements. If there is no verbal declaration of completion, implicit declaration occurs when the first combat is begun.