Fiery Hellhound
The firebreathing dog is one of the oldest reusable templates in red's toolkit: a vanilla-adjacent body stapled to a repeatable pump that turns excess mana into combat damage. The lineage runs back to Shivan Dragon, the card that established the +1/+0-per-red-mana pattern as red's signature way to convert a flooded hand into reach. Here the same engine arrives on a small Elemental Dog, which strips the design down to its skeleton: a 2/2 that trades up in combat or pushes through unblocked, with every extra red mana a single extra point. The ceiling is real (a clear board and an open mana pool make this a clock that scales with the game), but the floor is exactly what the body suggests, and nothing about the activation protects the creature from removal mid-attack. What it teaches, more than anything, is the cost curve of firebreathing at common: a fair rate, no built-in evasion, no toughness boost, just the raw +1/+0 that has defined red's mana sink since the earliest sets. As a piece of common-rarity design it does the quiet work of giving an aggressive red deck a reason to keep its land drops relevant past the point where a hand of two-drops would otherwise stall.





