Feasting Hobbit (Tales of Middle-earth Commander #439)

Feasting Hobbit {1}{G}

Creature — Halfling Citizen

Devour Food 3 (As this enters, you may sacrifice any number of Foods. This creature enters with three times that many +1/+1 counters on it.)

Creatures with power less than Feasting Hobbit’s power can’t block it.

His name, of course, was Proudfoot.

2/2

Illustrated by Lorenzo Mastroianni

Standard
Alchemy
Pioneer
Explorer
Modern
Historic
Legacy
Brawl
Vintage
Timeless
Commander
Pauper
Oathbreaker
Penny
Notes and Rules Information for Feasting Hobbit:
  • Devour Food is a variant of the devour ability. It allows you to sacrifice Foods rather than creatures, but otherwise functions identically to devour. (2023-06-16)
  • You may choose not to sacrifice any Foods for the devour Food ability. (2023-06-16)
  • If you cast this spell, you choose how many and which Foods to devour as part of the resolution of the spell. (It can't be countered at that point.) (2023-06-16)
  • The comparison of power is done only when blockers are declared. Decreasing the power of a creature blocking Feasting Hobbit or increasing the power of Feasting Hobbit after this point won't cause Feasting Hobbit to become unblocked. (2023-06-16)
  • Food is an artifact type. Even though it appears on some creatures in other sets, it's never a creature type. (2023-06-16)
  • If an effect refers to a Food, it means any Food artifact, not just a Food artifact token. For example, you can sacrifice Lembas, an artifact card with the Food subtype, to activate the last ability of Bill the Pony. (2023-06-16)
  • You can't sacrifice a Food token to pay multiple costs. For example, you can't sacrifice a Food token to activate its own ability and also to activate the last ability of Bill the Pony. (2023-06-16)
  • Some spells and abilities that create Food tokens may require targets. If each target chosen is an illegal target as that spell or ability tries to resolve, it won't resolve. You won't create any Food tokens. (2023-06-16)
  • Do not eat the delicious cards. No, not even for second breakfast. (2023-06-16)