Jibbirik Omnivore
Two mana for a 3/2 in green is the aggressive baseline, and this is a body built to hit that number with nothing attached: no keyword, no trigger, no clause to feed. That extra point of power over toughness is the whole shape of it. It wants to attack, trades up when it swings and down when it blocks, shrugs off a single point of incidental damage, but stalls the moment it faces an X/2 that can stare it down or a two-damage answer that clears it clean. Green has printed this exact silhouette since the earliest sets, the cheap beater whose only argument is the raw number on the top of the card, and its worth has always come down to how much a curve wants a two-drop that hits for three before it hits for anything else. On the play, into an empty board, it does exactly what a two-mana 3/2 does. The moment the ground clogs, it is a fragile creature that has stopped mattering, because there is no back half to fall back on. That plainness is not a flaw to explain away; it is the card's entire identity. It exists to fill the slot where an aggressive green deck needs a warm body at the right rate, and it will live or die on whether the deck around it can close the game before the 3/2 stops being relevant.
