Eidolon of Obstruction
Hatebears rarely aim at the planeswalker slot, and that is what makes this Spirit's second line unusual. A tax on loyalty activations is a narrower kind of pressure than the disruption white two-drops usually carry: it does not stop the walker from resolving, does not shrink its loyalty, and asks nothing of your own board. It simply makes every plus, minus, and ultimate cost more, which can turn a walker that would have run away by turn four into one that limps behind curve. Against a deck leaning on repeated activations to build advantage, that recurring tax compounds far past the two mana it took to deploy. The design borrows the recurring-cost math older stax pieces ran on, but points it at a card type rather than at spells or lands, and first strike keeps a 2/1 relevant on the ground so the body is not dead once the walkers are gone. The friction is that its whole payoff is contingent: against an opponent with no planeswalkers, the tax reads as nothing, leaving a fragile beater. That contingency is why it lives as a targeted answer rather than a maindeck staple, a piece that punishes a specific plan hard and does little against the rest.




