Evie Frye
The looting engine here is a familiar shape given a sharp new edge: a repeatable draw-then-discard that most of the time just filters, but which converts a discarded creature card into evasion for a body you already control. That conditional trigger is what keeps the effect honest at one mana and a tap. You are not paying for raw card advantage; you are paying for a filter that occasionally rewrites a combat step, and only when you feed it the right fuel. It asks you to run a critical mass of creature cards you are willing to pitch, then time the activation for the turn a swing needs to connect. The Partner clause tutors Jacob Frye straight into a hand rather than requiring you to draw the pair naturally, so the two halves of the design reliably assemble around the aggressive-tempo plan they were built for: filter early, dig toward threats, then push a creature through unblocked to close. The unblockable clause targets any creature you control on the battlefield, so the loot turn and the alpha strike can involve entirely different bodies: the card you pitch goes to the graveyard, while the evasion lands on whichever attacker you want to slip through. It is a small, precise piece of engine work that rewards a deck built to keep the loot channel fed rather than one treating the activation as pure card selection.


