Aven Fisher
Dying is the point. Most defensive bodies are pure tempo loss when they trade: you spend the mana, hold the air for a turn, and then watch the creature hit the graveyard with nothing to show for it. The death trigger refunds the card on the way out, which inverts the math on every line that kills it. Block to die, chump an attacker, eat a burn spell, sacrifice it for value, and each exchange ends with a fresh draw. That makes it a chump blocker you are glad to lose, rarer than it sounds: a removal spell pointed at it stops being a clean one-for-one and becomes a wash, because you cash the body in for a card rather than just losing it. The death trigger also smooths attrition standoffs, where neither side wants to be the first to run dry, and it slots cleanly into any graveyard-matters or sacrifice shell, since dying is the outcome you are actively steering toward. It is not a powerful card so much as a frictionless one: a role-player whose modest rate is offset by refusing to be a liability when it falls. Plenty of blue fliers since have carried value riders stapled to a modest body, and this is one of the unfussy early designs they descend from, a creature whose entire job is to be worth more dead than its rate would suggest.








