Disposal Mummy
Graveyard hate stapled to a body is the oldest trick for making a narrow effect main-deckable, and the rate here is tuned so the hate costs you nothing extra. A 2/3 for three sits at a respectable defensive point, holding the ground against the early attackers it lines up against, while the enters-the-battlefield trigger exiles a single card from an opponent's graveyard on the way down. That single-card cap keeps it a scalpel rather than a broom: it cannot empty a graveyard or shut off a flashback engine wholesale, only pick off the one card that matters most at the moment it lands, whether that is delve fuel, a recursion target, or a reanimation payload. The design lives between a do-nothing answer and a do-nothing body, splitting the difference so neither half is wasted: when the opponent has no graveyard worth touching, you still have a creature; when they do, the exile is incidental upside on a card you were happy to play anyway. It belongs to a long line of bodies that fold a sideboard effect into the maindeck, the white-creature cousin to the attrition tools other colors print at adjacent costs.


