Disfigure
Black's answer to the question of how it kills small creatures at instant speed without paying the toll of life loss, sacrifice, or a discard cost. The -2/-2 is the load-bearing choice: by shrinking the target rather than dealing damage, it slides past indestructible, dodges the damage-prevention effects that blunt burn, and folds neatly into a toughness-stacking calculus where a single point of incidental damage earlier in the turn turns a two-mana threat into a corpse. The trade-off is honest. It caps out quickly: a four-toughness blocker shrugs it off, and against anything that has grown it does nothing. That ceiling is exactly what one black mana is supposed to buy, and the design has been the steady reference point for cheap black removal ever since, the rate every subsequent -X/-X spell gets measured against. Compare Cast Down or Fatal Push, which buy reach in exchange for conditions; Disfigure buys nothing but speed and certainty against the bottom of the curve. It is the spell you keep in the deck precisely because it asks no questions about converted mana cost, color, or board state, only whether the thing in front of you is small enough to fit under the line.







