Octo Opus (Unfinity #54)

Octo Opus {3}{U}{U}

Enchantment

When Octo Opus enters the battlefield, create a 4/4 blue Octopus Performer creature token named Contortionist with “At the beginning of your upkeep, you may fold this token in half.” (It becomes 2/2, then 1/1, ½/½, and so on.)

Sacrifice Octo Opus: Draw a card and an additional card for each of Contortionist’s folds.

Illustrated by Tomek Larek

Standard
Alchemy
Pioneer
Explorer
Modern
Historic
Legacy
Brawl
Vintage
Timeless
Commander
Pauper
Oathbreaker
Penny
Notes and Rules Information for Octo Opus:
  • To represent the token, you have three choices: (1) Use the printed token included in some Unfinity booster packs, (2) use another printed Magic card or token as a substitute, or (3) use anything else, read the next ruling, and be slightly sad. (2022-10-07)
  • If you’re not using a printed token or another Magic card to represent the token, you can’t fold it in half. Its power, toughness, and the number of folds it has (zero) remains the same. (2022-10-07)
  • Sacrificing Octo Opus has no effect on Contortionist. It will still have the ability to fold in half at the beginning of your upkeep, but doing so is optional. (2022-10-07)
  • If you control more than one creature named Contortionist as the last ability resolves, perhaps because you created a copy of the token or created more than one to begin with, choose one of them and use its number of folds to determine how many cards to draw. (2022-10-07)
  • If Contortionist is no longer on the battlefield, you may still sacrifice Octo Opus to draw a card. (2022-10-07)
  • Creatures in Un- games with power between 0 and 1 still deal damage equal to their power, and players can have fractional life totals. For example, if a ½/½ creature deals combat damage to a player with 10 life, the player will go to 9 ½ life. (2022-10-07)
  • If an effect instructs you to do something based on Contortionist’s power or toughness that can only be done in whole numbers, such as draw cards, and Contortionist’s power or toughness isn’t a whole number, ignore that instruction. You can’t draw half a card, mill a quarter of a card, etc. (2022-10-07)