Last updated on July 30, 2025

Spider-Punk | Illustration by Forrest Imel
“With great power comes great responsibility.” Sure. But sometimes great power comes with a studded leather jacket, a power chord, and a “Smash the system!” attitude.
Which, in Magic, sounds pretty much like “Screw Counterspell!”

“Spells and abilities can’t be countered” is quite literally what Spider-Punk will bring when Spider‑Man x MTG launches in September: A 2‑drop that can turn a quiet stack into a mosh pit!
So… Spider Who?

Sensational Spider-Man | Illustration by Dan Dos Santos
In the Marvel Spider-Verse, Spider‑Punk is Hobart “Hobie” Brown. He's from an alternate timeline called “Earth‑138”, and he's an anarchic, guitar‑swinging Spider‑hero who rose up against President Norman Osborn’s regime. So, no, he's not Peter Parker; he’s an alternate‑universe Spider‑Man whose vibe is equal parts anti‑authoritarian and anti‑establishment—exactly the kind of Spidey who’d slap “no counters, no prevention” on a card and call it a day. He debuted in The Amazing Spider‑Man #10 (2015) and later fronted his own miniseries.
(And, yeah, if you're not into Spider-Man lore, let's just say there are a lot of spiders, and quite a lot that are not Peter. It's complicated.)
That's Alotta Card Text

Questing Beast | Illustration by Igor Kieryluk
Spider-Punk comes with a ton of text for a 2-drop that costs just . For starters, our legendary arachno-punk hero has riot, which gives you a choice between entering with haste, or a +1/+1 counter.
Then Spider-Punk makes the (spider) crowd go ape by giving riot to all of them. And then he kicks things up to 11 by dropping down two table‑warping rules: Spells and abilities can’t be countered, and damage can’t be prevented. And this includes ward effects: If you point a Disenchant at Roaming Throne with Spider-Punk in play, you don't need to pay an extra to bypass the Throne's ward.
But the really fun part is that these are symmetrical effects – they work for anyone, not just you. Spider-Punk is all about sharing the mayhem and the chaos.
In other words, you’re cutting every brake line at once. Your foes won't be able to counter your spells, but you won't be able to counter theirs… and if they point their Disenchant at your Roaming Throne, they don't need to pay the extra either.
The same happens with Spider-Punk‘s “Damage can’t be prevented” clause: It punches straight through effects like Fog and cowards strategists hiding behind The One Ring, no matter if friend or foe.
Whoever punches the fastest and hardest wins when Spider-Punk hits the table!
Commander Punk
“This seems like a surefire way to let the person sitting across from you win,” notes u/Treasure_Trove_Press in one of the most upvoted comments discussing Spider-Punk‘s viability in cEDH.
“If you get this and someone puts a Silence on the stack, it's gonna resolve,” agrees u/venominon, “and now someone else gets the benefit of your card. It's really good, but will definitely get overplayed early on.”
The consensus among competitive commander players is basically: Anyone who plays this and passes the turn is an idiot. Whether or not Spider-Punk is good enough to win the turn it's played (and without giving a flash-speed win to the Borne Upon the Wind player during your own turn) remains to be seen.
Where Else Could The Punk Rock?
Modern players are intrigued but cautious. A 2‑mana 2/1 that makes the stack untouchable for a turn is cute sideboard tech (and would have been quite interesting back when The One Ring was legal, which is probably what they intended during design). But it’s also a fragile, symmetrical card that dies to anything and everything.
Punk's Pioneer reception is also quite good, although some players note that counterspells are not too prevalent in the format.
So… How Good Is Spider‑Punk, Really?

Spider-Gwen, Free Spirit | Illustration by Lie Setiawan
Spider-Punk will probably be a really fun all-in, double-edge sword. You play it to win now, not to accrue value. If you pass the turn, don’t act surprised when someone else points at the sign that says “spells and abilities can’t be countered” and walks through it. Your pod will learn fast to kill Spider‑Punk on sight—or thank you before they combo off, depending where they stand in the Fair-Bollocks Combo Spectrum.
That’s a feature, not a spider bug!
If you wanted to buy a Magic card that makes everyone stop pretending the stack is polite society, congratulations: Your friendly neighborhood anarchist just crashed through the skylight.
And, well… as u/TheSeigiSniper notes, “Hobie would want you to proxy this card.” Just saying!
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