You can sacrifice the creature with exploit if it’s still on the battlefield. If it has an ability that triggers when it exploits a creature (or, in this case, when any creature you control exploits a creature), that ability will trigger.
Colonel Autumn
You choose whether to sacrifice a creature and which creature to sacrifice as an exploit ability resolves.
If Colonel Autumn isn’t on the battlefield as an exploit ability of a creature you control resolves, Colonel Autumn’s last ability won’t trigger. You won’t get +1/+1 counters, even if you sacrifice a creature.
Last observed at $0.48, up from $0.47 thirty days ago. Over the trailing 90 days the price moved between $0.47 and $0.98 across 69 observations. Headline volatility reads high. Cross-checked across TCGplayer, eBay sold, Cardmarket EU, and Star City.
Last observed on Scryfall 19 hours ago at $0.48.
This printing is one of 2 catalogued treatments from PIP — the lineup includes Extended Art alongside the standard finish. Across our catalog the Rarix library tracks every variant in the same family so collectors can compare price, scarcity and demand inside a single lineage.
This card belongs to *Fallout* (released March 2024).
Card #411 in Fallout.
Rarity tier: rare. Rares occupy the bottom-of-pack rare slot in standard boosters.
Card type: Legendary Creature — Human Soldier. Color identity: black/white. Mana cost: {1}{W}{B} (3 converted). Keyword abilities: Lifelink and Exploit.
Legal in Legacy, Vintage, and Commander.
EDHrec ranks this card #7,716 in Commander, putting it in the niche-pick tier of the format's playable pool.
Illustrated by Daniel Romanovsky. Rarix tracks 70 other cards credited to this artist across the catalog — browse the full gallery to see the body of work.
Search across TCGplayer, eBay sold, Cardmarket EU, and Star City from the marketplace deeplinks above to compare live listings.
Magic: The Gathering · ™ & © Wizards of the Coast · Illus. Daniel Romanovsky
Card data via Scryfall. Rarix is fan-made; not endorsed by the rights holders.
