But the seed was planted.

He cast it again, making another 1/1 token copy of the Drake. Swung that token. Dealt 1. Sacrificed it. Gave unblockable to… the same real Drake .

Now the real Drake had two redundant instances of “can’t be blocked.” The opponent could remove one—but not both.

A young Dimir spy named Kaelen was tired of losing his Phantom Ninja to a single Murder spell. He needed a redundant unblockable—a way to get a giant, game-ending Crackling Drake past a wall of 0/4 Plant tokens.

The flavor text below was a single whispered phrase: “First one shows the cracks. Second one walks through.”

Its text read: “Tunnel-Guide can’t be blocked. When Tunnel-Guide deals combat damage to a player, you may sacrifice it. If you do, target creature you control gains ‘This creature can’t be blocked’ until end of turn.”

The moral of the story, as whispered in the Dimir safe houses: “Don’t make one creature unblockable. Make unblockable a resource you can spend—and duplicate. Because in Magic, the scariest creature isn’t the one with trample. It’s the one that you can’t even see coming.”

The Dimir, however, thought differently.

Make Creature Unblockable Mtg Online

But the seed was planted.

He cast it again, making another 1/1 token copy of the Drake. Swung that token. Dealt 1. Sacrificed it. Gave unblockable to… the same real Drake .

Now the real Drake had two redundant instances of “can’t be blocked.” The opponent could remove one—but not both.

A young Dimir spy named Kaelen was tired of losing his Phantom Ninja to a single Murder spell. He needed a redundant unblockable—a way to get a giant, game-ending Crackling Drake past a wall of 0/4 Plant tokens.

The flavor text below was a single whispered phrase: “First one shows the cracks. Second one walks through.”

Its text read: “Tunnel-Guide can’t be blocked. When Tunnel-Guide deals combat damage to a player, you may sacrifice it. If you do, target creature you control gains ‘This creature can’t be blocked’ until end of turn.”

The moral of the story, as whispered in the Dimir safe houses: “Don’t make one creature unblockable. Make unblockable a resource you can spend—and duplicate. Because in Magic, the scariest creature isn’t the one with trample. It’s the one that you can’t even see coming.”

The Dimir, however, thought differently.