On Sat, May 9, 2026 at 5:07 PM Gregory Hayes via agora-discussion <
[email protected]> wrote:

> Fair argument, I guess "prohibit" is not the same thing as "prevent", so
> the rules could be interpreted as preventing an action with no mechanism
> without prohibiting it.
>
> I do note that if Rule 2713's "as described in this rule" clause blocks
> this, it also blocks scoring numbers from Agoran birthdays and welcome
> packages.
>
> - Galle


I suspect that the rules do prevent you from doing this. But I think you
might be missing a part of what ais523 is saying: even if the rules don't
prevent you from doing something, that doesn't mean you can do it. A player
can send a message saying "I teleport to the moon", and no rule prohibits
such teleportation. That doesn't mean that the player is on the moon, which
is likely fortunate for their well-being. There simply isn't any reason
that action should work.

There's a precedent somewhere that there are some actions you can do by
announcement even without the rules saying so, like celebrating. Saying "I
celebrate x" is arguably enough to celebrate the thing, under the common
language definition of celebrating, and no rule stops you from celebrating
in this way. But I don't see how scoring a number is something you can just
naturally do. And even if you could (say you invented a game where you
could score a number by saying it, and thus scored points in that game by
announcement), I don't think the rules would pay attention to it.

-Aris

>

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