be careful, you played teferi announced the use of it to tuck a creature then mentioned the trigger for the beanstalk. At a big money tournament that would be a missed trigger.
It's also a mandatory draw, not "you may draw a card". So if your opponent calls the judge wouldn't they rule that you draw the card anyway? Whether you know the card on top or not doesn't change his play
@@pacman3743 Missed triggers can get really in depth and it all depends on rules enforcement level. If you're playing a Regular REL, the guideline is pretty much to put the trigger on the stack unless there is a significant difference in board state. At Competitive REL it's different. If it's a "may" ability, the default action is to not do it. If you miss it, it's assumed you chose to not do it. The other way around is different though. If it's a "mandatory trigger", then the judge is going to ask your opponent if they would like the trigger placed on the stack. Finally, the judge is going to determine if the trigger is beneficial or detrimental. A missed detrimental trigger will result in a warning for game rule violation. And of course I haven't been actively involved in the judge community since the Judge Academy took over... so rulings can and do change.
Lurker and long time magic player. Wanted to chime in and say these comments don't sound like ppl who play paper magic. Anyways, thanks for posting paper magic! I miss it!