![]() At the end of the game, any face-down creatures in play are revealed to everyone. ![]() ![]() ![]() Also, whenever a face-down creature leaves play, it’s revealed to everyone. You can’t look at any your opponents control. You can look at any face-down creatures you control. And, your opponent has no idea what your face-down creatures are. They’re 2/2 colorless, nameless, typeless creatures with no abilities. All face-down creatures are exactly the same. When the spell resolves, it comes into play as a face-down creature. It goes on the stack like any other spell, so your opponent can respond to or counter it, again, without knowing what it is. Don’t show it to your opponent – he or she doesn’t get to know what it is. When you play a creature card with morph face down, you pay to play it. Turn it face up any time for its morph cost.)”īlistering Firecat was previewed in the last issue of the Sideboard magazine. The card text for morph looks like this: “Morph (You may play this face down as a 2/2 creature for. It’s an ability called “morph,” which allows you to play creatures with the ability face down. But now we’ve created a work of evil genius of our very own. Normally, the job of the rules team is to protect the unsuspecting public from the crazy schemes of designers such as Mike Elliott, Bill Rose, Mark Rosewater, and Brian Tinsman.
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