[Ruing] Team Conquest conflicts

By Bayushi Shunsuke, in L5R LCG: Rules Discussion

We have an interesting rules question...how do the "When a player passes their conflict" cards work in 2v2? Do these cards function even though teams technically declare conflicts?

Just now, Bayushi Shunsuke said:

We have an interesting rules question...how do the "When a player passes their conflict" cards work in 2v2? Do these cards function even though teams technically declare conflicts?

When a team passes a conflict, both of those players are considered to have passed the conflict.

[Tyler Parrott, Feb 12 2020]

When both players pass (or declare), is it safe to assume the passes are simultaneous?
And are both players passing considered to be separate triggers?

Can Hida Amoro / Mediator of Hostilities / Pacifist Philosopher trigger their Reaction twice to affect both players?

At the other end of the conflict, it is explicit in the rulebook that "card abilities that trigger when a player wins a conflict can be triggered if that player’s team wins a conflict".
Are both players considered to have won/lost the conflict?
Does Hall of Victories trigger once or twice?

Just now, Bayushi Shunsuke said:

When both players pass (or declare), is it safe to assume the passes are simultaneous?
And are both players passing considered to be separate triggers?

Can Hida Amoro / Mediator of Hostilities / Pacifist Philosopher trigger their Reaction twice to affect both players?

At the other end of the conflict, it is explicit in the rulebook that "card abilities that trigger when a player wins a conflict can be triggered if that player’s team wins a conflict".
Are both players considered to have won/lost the conflict?
Does Hall of Victories trigger once or twice?

Both players passing or declaring is considered to be simultaneous, and the reaction window that opens can trigger reactions to both triggering conditions.

Hida Amoro/Mediator of Hostilities/Pacifist Philosopher can (and in Amoro’s case, must) trigger twice as they are reacting to both players passing.

Both players are considered to have won/lost the conflict when a conflict resolves.

[Tyler Parrott, Feb 15 2020]