Loki, Lord of Misrule
Clone effects usually acquire: you copy the opposing bomb or your own singular threat and staple its identity onto a blank body. This activated ability inverts that transaction. It designates one creature you already control, then prints that creature's identity onto everything else you control, dropping the legend rule so the whole board can wear the same face until end of turn. The deckbuilding question changes shape: not what to steal, but which single creature is worth becoming a squadron. Because a copy arrives without re-firing the entry triggers that already resolved, the payoff clusters on static abilities, tap effects, and attack triggers that every freshly-minted duplicate contributes the same turn. The sorcery clause plus the tap cost slam the door on any instant-speed combat ambush: you commit the copy in your main phase, broadcast the swing, then untap toward next turn's repeat. The cleanup step is the real leash, since the board reverts to its printed selves at end of turn, so the ability rewards builds engineered to bank one explosive turn into something that outlasts it (tokens spawned, damage dealt, life drained) rather than to hold a durable copied battlefield. Read it less as a clone than as a repeatable overrun engine in a clone's clothes: it fires again every turn it survives to untap, converting a one-shot party trick into a recurring threat that has to be answered again and again.
