Leech Fanatic
Lifelink that clocks out the moment the turn passes is a deliberately asymmetric grant, and it tells you exactly what this 2/2 is built to do: attack. On your turn the keyword rewards you for pushing damage through, turning every point of combat into life gained; on your opponent's turn, when that same keyword would otherwise convert a chump block into a life swing, it simply isn't there. That split is what steers the card. A full-time lifelink two-drop would blunt an opposing aggro plan by making blocks costly on both sides; restricting the gain to your own turn keeps the card firmly on the offensive, a body that banks life when it is the beatdown and offers none of that comfort back on defense. The design points toward decks that want a low, proactive lifegain source rather than a defensive cushion: a racing aggressive shell that wants to stay ahead on life without slowing down to build a wall, or an engine that treats incidental life as fuel. Lifelink is a keyword designers usually hand out flat, applying in every combat regardless of whose turn it is. Carving it down to just your own turn is a small, precise piece of tuning, and the conditional wording steers the card toward aggression more sharply than a plain 2/2 with unrestricted lifelink ever would.
