Colossus Hammer
The math is the joke and the payoff both: one mana to cast, eight to attach, in exchange for a swing so absurd it lands almost any creature into lethal range. That equip cost is the entire tension. Left to its native rate, this is a card that never sees a battlefield, a piece of Equipment priced out of any deck actually trying to win. The design only functions when you cheat past the , and the whole ecosystem that grew around it is a study in equip-cost circumvention: cards that reduce equip costs to nothing, cards that attach Equipment for free, one-mana creatures with evasion granted elsewhere. Bolt the Bird was never the plan; strap ten power onto a hexproof one-drop on turn two and win before the opponent draws a removal spell was. The flying clause is the tell that this was built for the ground: it strips evasion precisely because the intended targets already have their own way through. What reads as a Timmy trap (a giant hammer, a giant number, an unpayable price) is actually a combo enabler in disguise, a payoff that punishes fair use and rewards the players willing to build an entire shell around getting it onto a creature for free. The rate is a warning label. The decks that ignore it are the ones that make the card sing.






