Death Speakers
Protection from black is the entire card, and the rate works precisely because that immunity runs along exactly one axis: this 1/1 cannot be targeted by black removal, cannot be blocked by black creatures, and shrugs off combat damage from them, while against any other opponent it reverts to a plain one-drop with no upside. The keyword does not make the body bigger or cheaper; it makes the body unkillable in one narrow lane, and that specificity is the bargain the design strikes. It belongs to a design philosophy Wizards has largely abandoned: the narrow sideboard creature printed as a maindeck slot, where a hate-bear's only reason to exist is the hate. Homelands wore single-color protection like heraldry, a recurring flavor motif rather than a tuned competitive ability, and many of its creatures carried the keyword as a badge. The lineage runs forward through cleaner executions: Mother of Runes hands out protection at will, and later white one-drops fold it into broader kits. This is the unadorned ancestor, the card that says protection from a color and stops there, a study in how flat a hate-creature can be when the only thing on it is the hate.


