Ellivere of the Wild Court
Aura decks have always carried a structural liability: pour buffs onto one creature, and a single removal spell cashes in two cards for one. The Role-token mechanic sidesteps that math by making the buff a token, and this Human Knight is the piece that turns the mechanic into a recurring engine rather than a one-time boost. Every time it enters or attacks, it manufactures a fresh Virtuous Role attached to a creature you already control, so a removal spell on the enchanted body costs the opponent a card while you have already banked the token's value. The self-replacing clause (a new Role sends the old one to the graveyard) is the discipline that keeps this from spiraling into a single unkillable threat: you cannot stack Roles on one creature, so the payoff comes from spreading enchantments across a wide board. The card advantage lives on Ellivere itself, not on the token: any enchanted creature that connects draws you a card, which means the reward scales with how many attackers carry a Role rather than how large one of them gets. And because the token generation is an attack trigger, resolving at the declare-attackers step, the engine keeps feeding even after the first enchanted creature dies. The result is a synthesis of two green-white instincts that rarely occupied the same shell: the go-wide enchantment-matters value plan and the Aura go-tall archetype, welded into a board where every creature holds a share of the payoff.


