Jin-Gitaxias // The Great Synthesis
The Praetors of this cycle all share a trick: a modest front face that flips into a payoff, but Jin-Gitaxias is the one whose flip is a genuine win condition rather than a value bump. The front is a draw engine gated behind noncreature spells of mana value three or greater, deliberately narrow so that the card rewards a control shell already leaning on expensive interaction rather than a cheap spellslinger deck. The transform clause is the real design object: it costs three and a blue, activates only at sorcery speed, and demands seven cards in hand, so the front half is not a body you play and forget but a meter you fill before you cash it in.
Once it flips into The Great Synthesis, the Saga runs a three-chapter countdown that reads like a combo turn stapled to a permanent. Chapter one refills to a doubled hand and lifts your maximum hand size; chapter two bounces every non-Phyrexian creature, a sweeper that spares nothing you would call your own board unless it is Phyrexian; chapter three lets you cast any number of spells for free before returning the card front-face-up to reload. The genius of the structure is that the Saga's own lore-counter clock forces the payoff to resolve on rails: you cannot hold the free-cast chapter, so the deckbuilding question becomes what to have in hand when the countdown lands there.




