Clarion Cathars
Four mana buys four power split across two bodies, with the larger half arriving as a Knight and the smaller as a token that will outlive it. The trigger is what nudges this past filler: a 3/3 pays for itself in combat math, and the 1/1 rider means a single removal spell leaves something behind. That extra body does more than pad a stat line. It gives a sacrifice deck two things to feed instead of one, it holds an anthem or a convoke cost together with the main creature, and it keeps a go-wide board from thinning when the top of the curve gets answered. Human as a creature type is the load-bearing detail: a Human that makes another Human slots into a token-and-tribe plan without asking the deck to change shape. Nothing here rewards building around; it rewards being in a deck that already wants small white bodies and counts them. Two attackers, predictable trades, a token you are happy to send into a bigger blocker: that is the entire remit, and the design does not pretend otherwise. It fills the curve-topper slot in aggressive white shells that measure success in the number of bodies still standing, not in what any single one of them does.

