Kingpin, Wilson Fisk
Aristocrats decks have always paid you in triggers you cannot spend right away: a card here, a life-drain point there, a scry off a death. This one pays in ramp instead, and the accounting is deliberately tight. The sacrifice trigger fires only once each turn, and because "each turn" includes your opponents' turns, the payoff is decoupled from how hard you crash your own board: feed the graveyard three bodies on your turn and you still get two Treasure, but a defensive sacrifice on an opponent's turn banks two more before you untap. That fixed ceiling reframes what the effect is for. It turns any single sacrifice, whether a spent token, a chump blocker, or the 3/6 himself, into fixing and acceleration rather than fuel for an infinite loop. The 6-toughness back end matters to that plan, because a creature that shrugs off most combat and burn while hiding behind menace tends to stick around long enough to be the last thing you sacrifice, converting itself into the two Treasure that fund whatever comes next. The through-line is a mono-black design built on the idea that death should bankroll the following turn, not just the current one: it takes the familiar sacrifice-for-value chassis and reroutes the payoff away from cards and life toward any-color mana, the resource black usually has to strain for.
