Flowerfoot Swordmaster
Valiant turns your targeted spells into two things at once. A pump spell or an aura is already doing its stated job; here, the first time you point one at this mouse each turn, the rest of your Mice quietly grow a step alongside it. That reframes the deckbuilding math around cheap targeting: every combat trick, every equip, every one-mana buff becomes an anthem trigger on top of its printed effect, so a wide board scales off a single well-timed spell. The 1/2 body is deliberately survivable rather than threatening, built to sit on the battlefield collecting triggers instead of trading in the early turns. Offspring is the other lever, and it doubles the value engine literally: pay the extra cost and you get a second copy that also carries Valiant, meaning the same targeting spell can hit either body to fire the anthem. Two mice, two independent "first target each turn" windows, one buff spell going twice as far across a longer game. The card's real ambition is to make the bottom of the curve pull double duty: it punishes any deck that shrugs off small creatures and hands the go-wide plan a payoff that keeps growing without ever asking you to draw another threat.

