Thassa's Intervention
The elegance of this design is that the same X pays for two entirely different jobs. Spend it early and it becomes a dig instant in the impulse mold: it looks X deep, pulls up to two cards into hand, and bottoms the rest in random order, so you cannot rummage the same stack twice or leave a known card waiting on top. Spend it late and it turns into a counterspell that scales past a simple tax. Forcing the opponent to pay twice X means the demand climbs faster than their untapped lands do, so a five-mana Intervention becomes a wall few decks can pay through in the mid-game. What ties the two halves together is the payoff for holding mana open. A card that protects you on the opponent's turn and refuels you on yours answers the oldest control problem: the dead draw in a slow matchup, where you have counters in hand and nothing to counter. The modality is the entire balancing act, because neither half alone would earn the ceiling. A pure dig at this price would be too slow to justify the mana; a counter that only works when heavily overloaded would be too narrow to maindeck. Bundling them lets the card sit as insurance and cash out whichever way the turn breaks, which is exactly the flexibility that makes it worth the cards you commit to keeping it live.




