Culling Sun
A sweeper with a sorting principle instead of a body count. Where most board wipes set a damage threshold or simply destroy everything, this one draws its line at mana value, and that line is chosen with intent: three or less is precisely the band where the efficient threats live, the one- and two-drops of aggro, the value engines, the mana creatures and utility bodies that midrange leans on. What survives is the top of your curve. A control deck built to land its finishers above the cutoff turns a symmetrical-looking wrath into a one-sided one, clearing the opponent's board while its own four- and five-mana threats walk through untouched. That asymmetry is the entire design, and it is bought not with mana but with deckbuilding discipline: you have to commit to a curve that lives above the wipe to collect the reward. A deck that does will find this reading like a Wrath of God that politely declines to hit the things you care about. It is the wrath for the player who would rather build around a sweeper than be subject to one.
