Charging Troll
Selesnya's color pair was still finding its identity, and this Troll reads like an early attempt to give green-white a creature that stays useful on both sides of the table. Vigilance lets it crack in and still hold the line, while a green-mana regeneration keeps it alive through the burn and small removal of its era. The combination is more pointed than the rate suggests: a 3/3 that attacks freely and survives most combat math, refusing to die to a chump-and-burn plan as long as you can leave a single green source up. That regeneration cost is the leash. It is cheap enough to use every turn but still demands you hold mana open, which means the body that wants to attack and untap into more attacks is the same body asking you to keep land back for defense. Trolls in general inherited regeneration as a class trait going back to early sets, but pinning it to a vigilant attacker is the wrinkle here: most regenerators of the period were defensive walls, not creatures built to swing and keep swinging. The result is a midrange piece that does honest work in a fair green-white deck without ever bending a format around it.

