The Clone is a colorless 2/2 creature with no name, no types, no abilities, and no mana cost. It will still be face up. Its controller can’t pay {2}{B}{B} to turn it face up. 707.2a A copy acquires the color of the object it’s copying because that value is derived from its mana cost or color indicator.
What happens if you clone a clone MTG?
If a Clone copies another Clone, it copies whatever the first one copied. That is, you get what was printed on the card that the original Clone copied. You can choose not to copy anything. In that case, Clone comes into play as a 0/0 creature, and is probably put into the graveyard immediately.
Does clone target a creature magic?
You don’t target the creature you want to copy at all. Clone has a static ability that creates a replacement effect, which replaces it entering the battlefield as itself with the option to let it enter as itself or as a copy of a creature on the battlefield.
What happens when you clone a card in Magic The Gathering?
You only get to copy what is actually printed on the card; not any information that has changed the properties of that object. Clone copies exactly what was printed on the original creature and nothing more (unless that creature is copying something else or is a token; see below).
What happens when you copy a creature in Magic The Gathering?
If I use a Clone effect to copy a creature my opponent controls that has any of these extra abilities, will my clone also have Indestructble, Hexproof, or similar? If not, why does the Clone of a token produced with Twinflame have haste? No, they will not.
How does a copy of an object work?
When copying an object, the copy acquires the copiable values of the original object’s characteristics and, for an object on the stack, choices made when casting or activating it (mode, targets, the value of X, whether it was kicked, how it will affect multiple targets, and so on).