Ouphe

Ouphe is a creature type used for cards that depict annoying little humanoids, often collecting treasures or tinkering with artifacts.

Description
Ouphes are often associated with the (green) natural world, and are related to faeries and possibly gremlins. All ouphes tend to be small in stature (about the size of a dwarf or kithkin) with pointed ears, but otherwise vary widely in appearance, including the human-like Shelkin Brownie and Pyknite, and the animalistic Brown Ouphe. The first creature to bear the type was Brown Ouphe in Ice Age (though the Shelkin Brownie from Legends and Niall Silvain from The Dark were retroactively issued errata to become Ouphes as well.

Most ouphes are asocial, and many are hostile toward artifice. They have a reputation for being extremely annoying.

Ouphes inhabit numerous different planes, including Dominaria (where they thrived during the Ice Age), Shadowmoor, Mirrodin, and Eldraine.

Trivia

 * "Ouphe" is an old Germanic word, possibly Old English or Icelandic, meaning "elf child" or "one left by the faeries."
 * In the Grand Creature Type Update the creature types Brownie, Niall-Silvain and Pyknite were all changed into Ouphe. In the The Grand Creature Type Update Update Gremlin was dropped in favor of Ouphe (Phyrexian Gremlins), but this was reversed in Mirrodin Besieged.
 * The subtype Ouphe is preferred over Faerie when the creatures aren't little humanoids with wings. It took a while before this distinction became clear. For example Shelkin Brownie used to be a Faerie, while Fyndhorn Brownie used to be a Brownie. Now, both are Ouphes. In 2018, Mark Rosewater was arguing that the Ouphe type might get consolidated with green Faeries. However, three more Ouphes have been printed since then, in Modern Horizons, Throne of Eldraine and Modern Horizons 2, so it appears they've decided to maintain the subtype.
 * Kitchen Finks</c> is arguably the most well-known Ouphe, due to its infinite life combo with Melira, Sylvok Outcast</c>. They're styled after the dust bunnies from Hayao Miyazaki's My Neighbor Totoro.
 * Gilder Bairn</c> appears in many casual decks, because of the unique counter-doubling ability.
 * Collector Ouphe</c> is frequently featured in competitive lists as sideboard hate for artifact strategies.