Atzocan Seer
A mana dork with a tribal recursion clause bolted on is a tidier design than it first reads, and the two halves are meant to be spent at opposite ends of the game. The 2/3 body taps for any color, which lets it ramp a Dinosaur deck into its expensive finishers a turn or two early: mana fixing that only earns its three-mana slot inside the tribe it supports, since a 2/3 dork this expensive has no life outside its synergy. The sacrifice clause is the build-around back end, and it is deliberately one-shot. You cash the creature in to return a single Dinosaur from the graveyard to your hand, converting a removed or blocked threat into a second cast rather than a permanent loop. That sequencing is the wrinkle: the card wants to be played early for the mana, then spent late to retrieve whatever big lizard has already died, so its value climbs the longer the game runs. Folding recursion into a fixing body is a clean way to give a creature-type theme staying power without printing a dedicated reanimation spell, and the druid does both jobs from a single slot.

