Relentless X-ATM092
The design models an enemy that will not stay down, and both halves of the card push that single fantasy. The evasion clause is the strange one: it ignores flying and menace entirely, asking instead for three or more bodies to gang up on the 6/5. Against a defense too thin to muster that many blockers, the attack just resolves and six damage lands; the tax in creatures only comes due when a wide board actually commits to stopping it. The reanimation is where the identity sits. Eight generic mana buys the Robot Spider back from the graveyard, tapped and marked with a finality counter, and that counter is the balancing weight: the second life is the last one, so this becomes a threat an opponent has to spend removal on twice before it stays gone. There is a sequencing wrinkle worth naming around sacrifice outlets. Before that first self-return, the creature carries no counter and can be looped through any outlet freely; the instant it comes back, the finality clause slams that door shut. Everything about the package favors a grinding, attrition plan over a tempo one. It is slow, it is expensive, and it asks the opponent to answer it more than once, all priced entirely in colorless mana so no particular color is on the hook to run it. This is a card for the deck that wins by outlasting an opponent's supply of clean answers.
