Liesa, Forgotten Archangel
The design solves the same asymmetry problem twice with two clauses that read as mirrored but aren't. Your other nontoken creatures come home at the next end step; opposing creatures get exiled instead of dying. The first half turns every trade into card advantage, because your bodies return to hand rather than filling a graveyard for nothing. The second half is the crueler one: it doesn't just deny opposing recursion, it converts your removal into permanent removal and shuts off every death trigger the opponent was counting on. Anything an aristocrats deck wants to squeeze from creatures actually dying stops working the moment this is on the battlefield: no death payoffs, no chump-and-recur, no graveyard to rebuild from. It does leave one seam open, and the distinction matters. An opponent can still pay a sacrifice cost for value; the outlet like Ashnod's Altar still produces its mana even as the creature is exiled, so it's the "dies" triggers that go dark, not the act of sacrificing itself.
What makes the exile clause more than hate is that it's a replacement effect on the death event itself, not a trigger on the stack, so it can't be responded to or fizzled: the creature is exiled the instant it would die, with no window to interrupt. Every combat where another of your creatures dies, you keep the card; every combat where they lose one, they lose it forever. Angels have long been white's answer to graveyard value; this one wears black to attack the mechanic from the inside rather than sweeping the yard after the fact.







