Gudul Lurker
Unblockable is the kind of evasion that usually reads as a fragile commitment: you pay for it up front, and the body it sits on tends to be small enough that the keyword is the only thing you bought. The megamorph wrinkle here is what makes the design more interesting than a plain one-mana sneak-through. Play it hidden as a nondescript morph with no visible evasion, then flip it for a single blue: the +1/+1 counter restores the toughness the face-up 1/1 would otherwise lose, while the unblockable text comes back online, leaving a 2/2 that no board state can wall. That informational gap is the real payload. An opponent staring down an anonymous 2/2 has no way to tell whether they are looking at a brick or a recurring source of unanswerable damage, and the flip can wait until the chip matters most. The 1/1 unblockable mode for a single mana is the floor; the disguised mode turns the same card into a bluff that can become a clock at instant speed, slipping past a defensive board that would otherwise blank a one-drop. It is a small creature carrying two distinct ways to be relevant, and the cost of the second is deliberately cheap enough that the threat stays live all game.

