Elvish Hexhunter
Disenchant and Naturalize have always answered enchantments at a cost: a card, a color commitment, and a moment where the spell sits dead in hand if nothing on the board needs killing. This Elf rethinks that bargain by making the answer a permanent. Cast it for a single green-or-white pip (cheap enough that any deck touching those colors can run it without bending the manabase), and it sits on the battlefield as a 1/1 body until an enchantment appears, then trades itself for the kill. The sacrifice cost keeps the rate from spiraling: one activation, one creature spent, telegraphed and single-use rather than a repeatable engine. The payoff for the patience is the instant-speed timing. Leave the Elf untapped and the held answer doubles as a deterrent, discouraging an opponent from resolving an enchantment into open mana. The posture costs something real, though, since the activation taps the creature and there is no vigilance: a turn spent attacking is a turn the destroy effect is offline, so each turn forces a choice between pressure and insurance. As color-pie reasoning, enchantment removal is one of the cleanest overlaps green and white genuinely share, and folding it onto a hybrid body is how a designer says "this is the shared answer" without printing two near-identical cards in two different colors.
