Ambassador Oak
Four mana for four power and toughness across two bodies, split as a 3/3 and a 1/1: the rate is fair, and the split is the point. This is the Treefolk-and-Elf bridge that a Warrior tribal deck reaches for when it wants to add two creatures to the board with a single card, padding go-wide counts and feeding effects that reward bodies rather than stats. The token carries two relevant types of its own, Elf and Warrior, so the design earns its keep less from the Treefolk that casts it than from the small green soldier it leaves behind. Functionally it sits in the same lineage as the many "creature that brings a friend" commons, the green expression of the same instinct that gave white its token-makers: a body now, a body for later, both surviving a single removal spell only halfway. Nothing here pushes a rate or breaks a format; it was built to be a clean, two-for-one common that turns one card into two attackers and two anthem targets, the kind of glue that a tribal-aggro shell needs in bulk and that does its quiet arithmetic without asking for a build-around.





