Aysen Crusader
Most lords hand out a static bonus to the team; this one points the synergy inward, counting your Soldiers and Warriors and folding that number into its own body. It scales itself rather than the board, a design template (a creature that grows with its kin instead of buffing them) that would later become a standard tool in white and red aggressive decks. The catch is the era it came from. When it was printed, almost nothing in white actually carried the Soldier or Warrior type, so the counting clause that promises a growing threat usually delivered a base 2/2 with no fuel to feed it. The card reads like an aspirational engine for a tribe that had not been assembled yet, which is the recurring story of its set: mechanics pointed at synergies the cards around them could not supply. Decades of type-line errata and a flood of Soldier and Warrior printings have since given it a population to count, so the design that once sat inert now has a board state to draw from. It arrives early, ahead of the printings that would eventually make the count worth having.

