Kemba's Legion
The vigilance is the obvious read; the multiblock clause is the design. A 4/6 that attacks and still holds the fort is already a defensive body, but the Equipment-counting line turns it into a wall that scales with the same gear that makes it threatening. Strap on a single Equipment and it eats two attackers; load it up the way an Equipment-matters deck wants to and it stonewalls a whole board. The tension is that the cards which raise its damage ceiling also raise its blocking ceiling, so the same investment pulls double duty: the Cat that swings for lethal is the same Cat that anchors the defensive line against an alpha strike. That dual return is rare among seven-mana fatties, which usually ask you to pick a lane between offense and defense. The body is built to encourage greedy equipping rather than punish it, and it rewards the artifact-heavy white shells that have always wanted a payoff durable enough to survive the tempo loss of suiting up. The cost keeps it honest: at seven mana with a double-white pip, this is a top-end commitment, not a curve filler, so the multiblock only matters in a deck already invested in the gear it counts.

