Kambal, Consul of Allocation
Symmetry is the wrong word for this kind of taxation, because the symmetry only breaks in your favor. Where Eidolon of the Great Revel punishes cheap spells on both sides of the table, this Advisor exempts its controller entirely: only opponents pay, and the four-point life swing per noncreature spell means a control mirror or a combo deck digging through cantrips bleeds out one ritual at a time while the Kambal player climbs back out of burn range. The trigger fires on the cast, not the resolution, so a countered removal spell still costs the caster two, and it reaches every instant, sorcery, artifact, enchantment, and planeswalker an opponent puts on the stack; only their creature spells slip past it (a creature with an artifact or enchantment type included). The ability asks nothing of you, which is the choice that makes the body a question. A 2/3 is not a clock, so the card earns its slot on the drain alone, and against a spell-heavy deck it does, turning every answer they cast into a tempo-neutral tax that quietly shortens their runway. Against a creature deck the drain rarely triggers and Kambal shrinks to a serviceable blocker with a dormant ability, and that bifurcation is honest: this is a hate piece wearing a creature's clothes, built to make spell-based strategies do arithmetic they would rather avoid. The two life back is the underrated half. It is not just disruption; it is a life cushion that lets an aggressive Orzhov shell race decks it has no business racing, since every spell the opponent casts to stabilize hands the Kambal player two more points of margin.




