Ayara, Widow of the Realm // Ayara, Furnace Queen
Two Ayaras occupy the same card, and the split is the whole architecture. The front face is a payoff for the sacrifice engine that has followed the character across printings: tap and eat a creature or artifact, and the damage-plus-lifegain scales off the sacrificed permanent's mana value rather than a flat number, which rewards feeding it fatter fodder instead of a stream of tokens. That single line changes what an aristocrats deck wants: not just the most bodies, but the most valuable ones to throw away. The transform cost is the friction. Paying five plus a Phrexian red pip, only as a sorcery, is a deliberate speed bump; you commit at your own convenience, not in response to a threat, and you pay in mana or in life you might rather keep.
Flipping to Furnace Queen swaps the sacrifice-for-value plan for a recursion loop that runs on the same graveyard the front face was busy filling. At the beginning of combat on your turn, one artifact or creature card comes back with haste and gets exiled at end of turn, so the returned permanent is a lease, not a purchase: you get an attack, an activated ability's worth of use, then it is gone. The two halves are built to hand off to each other. The Widow stocks the yard by consuming permanents; the Queen spends that yard one temporary body at a time. The finality of that end-step exile is what keeps the recursion side from spiraling.



