Cadric, Soul Kindler
Two clauses working in concert here, and they attack the legend rule from opposite sides. The first suspends the rule entirely for tokens, so your copies stop annihilating each other; the second manufactures those copies, minting a hasty duplicate of any nontoken legendary that follows onto the battlefield for a single mana. The pairing turns every subsequent legendary drop into a two-for-one: the permanent itself, plus an end-of-turn clone that swings, taps for value, or fires an enters-the-battlefield trigger before the sacrifice clause clears it away. That built-in disposal is the honest part of the deal. The token vanishes at the next end step, so this is not a permanent doubling engine like Helm of the Host; it is a burst, best pointed at bodies that do their work the moment they arrive or the moment they attack. Red and white have always leaned into the legends theme, but most payoffs asked you to build a wide board of unique creatures and hope they survived. This flips the ask: you want a dense curve of impactful legendaries and a plan to convert each one's arrival into a same-turn haymaker, then let the clone expire. The design reads legendary permanents not as a tribal count but as a stream of one-shot triggers waiting to be doubled, and it is a Wizard body that rewards treating your uniques as fuel rather than a collection.

