Knight of the New Coalition
Four mana for four power across two vigilant bodies is the kind of rate that white commons and uncommons have chased for a long time: split your board, keep both halves back to block, and still turn the corner on attacks. The doubling is what makes it more than a French-vanilla body. Two 2/2s spread the risk that one 4/4 concentrates, dodging the single removal spell and the single blocker in a way a lone creature never can, and vigilance on both means the token army defends and attacks in the same turn without the usual tap-out tradeoff. The colors of the token (white and blue, Knight-typed) do quiet work too: a mono-white creature that hands you a blue permanent is a small hook for anything counting colors or tribes off the battlefield rather than the hand. It reads as filler because the numbers are modest, but the structure is deliberate: go-wide payoffs care about how many creatures you control, not how big they are, and this is two-for-one on that count from a single card. Designed as connective tissue for a Knight-flavored white deck that wants bodies faster than one-per-card, it fills the curve slot where you need to commit to the board without overcommitting to a single target.
