A-Eiganjo Exemplar
The rebalance is a buff, not a leash: the original body came down a mana higher for the same trigger, and dropping it to a one-drop is what let the tribe deploy it on curve. The interesting part lives in the trigger's shape. Rewarding a lone attacker is an old white-aggro lever, but hanging the bonus off a tribal umbrella rather than this body alone turns the effect into a recurring source of combat math instead of a one-shot pump. The gate is the "attacks alone" clause: the +1/+1 only lands when a single creature swings, so the card wants a board it deliberately declines to fully commit, a deck that builds a wide team and then picks one threat to push through each turn. That is the puzzle worth solving: assembling bodies you choose not to attack with, and reading when the extra point breaks a race versus when a full swing does more. Because the bump keys off whichever qualifying attacker carries the turn, this one included, the card rarely goes dead once the tribe is online; it stays live no matter which creature is doing the punching. The lever underneath is a repeatable single-attacker boost, and the demand that you commit exactly one body is the price of getting it every turn.
