Joraga Visionary
The four-mana cantrip creature is one of the flattest templates green ever prints, and this one wears the type line to prove it: an Elf and a Wizard both, tribal glue that never quite adds up to a payoff. The body does the real work. A 3/2 for four is a genuine attacker in a color that spends most of its curve on defensive fatties, and the enters-the-battlefield draw means the creature is never a dead card even when the board has stalled. That is the entire pitch: a beater whose worst case is a slightly overpriced draw spell, and the deck builds itself around not caring which half you needed on the turn you cast it. Green has a long line of these, from Elvish Visionary at two mana up through the various commons that trade rate for card advantage, and this sits at the expensive, larger end of that line: more combat presence, worse tempo. The Wizard classification is the quiet wrinkle, since it opens the card to spellcaster and wizard-matters shells that Elvish Visionary and its kin never touched, though nothing about the printed text rewards the tag directly. As common-rarity filler goes, it is honest: a curve-filler for a green creature deck that wants to keep drawing without slowing down, and nothing more ambitious than that.

