God-Pharaoh's Faithful
The 0/4 body is the giveaway: this is a wall built to do nothing but sit in front of an aggressive board while a point of life trickles in underneath it. A one-mana white creature that pays you for casting blue, black, and red spells is a curious shape, because white usually wants white company, and here the card explicitly stops caring about its own color. The intended home is a deck splashing those three colors around a white base, where each off-color cast adds a point of life and the four toughness keeps the wall standing long enough for those points to matter. Note the colors it ignores: casts in its own white do nothing, and green spells do nothing either, so the trigger rewards a Grixis-flavored spread of casts (the enemy colors of white, plus blue) rather than generic multicolor commitment. The lifegain is incidental rather than engineered: one life per spell is not pressure on the opponent, it is a buffer you build for yourself, buying turns against fast starts while a controlling shell assembles its endgame. That makes the card a strict role-player, a high-toughness one-drop whose only job is to absorb attacks and quietly pad your total while you cast the spells you were already going to cast. It asks nothing beyond the slot it occupies, and it offers nothing back to a deck that is not already pouring out a steady stream of blue, black, and red.

