Krosan Colossus
Nine mana for a keyword-light 9/9 is a price no deck would ever pay outright, and that absurdity is exactly the joke the morph cost is built around. The face-down cost lands a modest 2/2 blocker that holds the fort, and the flip to
arrives once the lands are online, spreading the payment across two turns and dodging the dead-card-in-hand problem that haunts a fattie this expensive. The math is the entire exercise in green's morph design: a hard-cast that exists only as a ceiling, a flip cost that quietly shaves a green pip and the total down to something a ramp board can actually reach, and a placeholder body that does enough to survive while the mana comes online. The size is deliberately ridiculous so that the only sane way to land it is through the side door, a loud demonstration of morph's central tension rather than a subtle one. Green's morph beaters from this era all wanted to be flipped rather than cast, and the Colossus is the loudest of them: a creature whose printed cost reads as a dare, and whose real cost is the one you pay in installments.


