Chained Brute
A 4/3 for two mana sits above the aggressive curve, and the drawback that pays for it is the classic tap-tax: swing once and the Devil stays sideways unless you feed it. The interesting part is how the untap cost is written. It is not a life payment or a pure mana sink; it is a sacrifice outlet welded to a creature you actively want attacking, which flips the drawback into an engine input. Every token, every expendable one-drop, every creature already caught in a losing combat trade becomes fuel to swing again, and because the ability sacrifices another creature as part of its cost, every activation feeds any death-triggers you have built around. That is the axis this card lives on: aggression that wants an aristocrat payoff standing next to it, so death triggers, incremental drains, and go-wide token production all convert their leftovers into repeated four-power attacks. The turn restriction on the untap does real work by closing the door on the surprise-blocker line after tapping out on offense; the untap fires only while it is your turn to press. Left in a deck with nothing to sacrifice, it is a one-shot 4/3 that stalls the moment it attacks, which is precisely the point. The rate assumes you brought the fodder, and it charges nothing extra for the body because the sacrifice math is the tax.
