Force Spike
The original tax counter, and the template every soft permission spell since has been built against. The design idea is that a single blue mana buys you a window: on turn one against an opening hand built around curving out, the demand is often unpayable, and even later it functions as a tempo tax that bleeds an opponent's turn by a mana. That window is also the card's discipline. The counter only bites when the opponent is tapped out or close to it, so it favors reading the board for mana availability over simply holding up countermagic and hoping. Every descendant has worked variations on the same math: Mana Leak raised the tax to
while adding a generic mana to the cost, Spell Pierce narrowed the targets to noncreature spells to keep the
tax live deeper into the game, Daze swapped the tax for a land-return alternative cost to let aggressive blue decks run it for free. Force Spike is the form stripped to its bones because it asks nothing extra of the caster and offers nothing to the opponent: one mana, one window, one decision. That austerity is also why it has aged into a narrow tool rather than a staple; the early-turn windows where the
is unpayable are precisely the ones that close as a game progresses and the opponent's mana opens up.

Rules text
Format Status
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Other printings
- Arena Anthology 3#5
- Jumpstart: Historic Horizons#780
- Magic Online Promos#31395
- Duel Decks: Izzet vs. Golgari#14
- Masters Edition III#36
- Friday Night Magic 2007#12
- Seventh Edition#76
- Seventh Edition#76★










