King Suleiman
A hate card carved straight from the source material: the wise king of the Thousand and One Nights, whose legend was built on binding djinn and efreet into brass vessels, given a tap ability that does exactly that. Few cards in Magic's history have mapped flavor to function this literally, and almost none have done it at the cost of an entire creature subtype's worth of design space. For decades the printing carried real teeth, because djinn and efreet were the prestige red and blue fatties of early Magic: City of Brass got its name from the same mythology, Juzám Djinn was the format's premier beater, and a two-mana repeatable answer to any of them was a genuine consideration in the original environments where those cards lived. The design has aged into a curiosity as the tribes stopped carrying weight, but the shape is worth noting: a white silver-bullet built before silver-bullet was a recognized design pattern, targeting two specific creature types by name rather than by mechanical trait. That literal-minded approach (name the thing, destroy the thing) is the same design philosophy behind Karma and the rest of Arabian Nights' tribal hosers, an approach Wizards moved away from quickly and has only occasionally revisited.
