Jazal Goldmane
The activation scales with the width you've already committed, which sets the whole strategic posture of this card: it punishes a board state more than it builds one. The anthem grows with each attacker, so the pump is small when you're behind and overwhelming when you're ahead, a curve that rewards going wide and then closing rather than grinding back from parity. Two attackers gives a modest boost; six turns a stalled token swarm into a lethal alpha strike, and the first strike on the body means it survives the combat math it creates. The repeatable nature is the real lever: unlike a one-shot overrun effect, the activation can be held until you've forced through blockers or an opponent taps out, and it can be fired multiple turns in a row if mana allows. That keeps it from sitting dead in hand the way a sorcery-speed overrun does, since it lives on a four-mana legendary body that contributes to the very attack it's pumping. Go-wide decks run into the same wall every time: they generate bodies easily but stall against bigger creatures, and a scaling combat anthem converts that quantity into the one thing those decks lack, reach. White has no shortage of ways to fill a board; this is one of the few that gives that board a way to win in a single swing.








