Grand Arbiter Augustin IV
Taxation that runs both ways. The dual cost reduction stacks with itself, so a deck built entirely in white and blue starts shaving up to off its own gold spells while levying a tax on every opponent at once: a Sphere of Resistance and a pair of Helm of Awakening effects compressed into a single 2/3 body. That asymmetry is the whole design thesis. Most cost-modification cards pick a direction (cheaper for you, or pricier for them); this one occupies both lanes simultaneously and demands that you commit your manabase to two colors to extract the discount. The body is the constraint that pays for the rest: a 2/3 dies to almost everything and contributes nothing to the board, so the card asks to sit in a control or prison shell where the tax is the gameplan rather than a creature deck where it would just be a fragile beater. In multiplayer the math compounds viciously, since the opponent tax applies to every other player while the discount stays yours alone, which is where this card found its enduring home. It belongs to a small family of legendary creatures whose entire value is rewriting how much mana the table pays, and it remains one of the sharpest examples: the spell-by-spell friction it generates is invisible until you watch an opponent come up one mana short on the turn that mattered.









