Linden, the Steadfast Queen
The triple-white cost is the whole thesis. A three-mana 3/3 with vigilance is unremarkable on paper, but the pip requirement is a color-commitment tax that only pays off in a deck flooded with white creatures, and that is exactly the deck the lifegain trigger wants. Every white attacker gains a point of life, so the payoff scales with the same board you needed to assemble to cast Linden in the first place: a mono-white go-wide board turns each combat step into a steady life climb while vigilance keeps her back to block. The design deliberately narrows the trigger to white creatures rather than "creatures you control," which prunes the reward for splashing and repays the commitment the mana cost already demanded. She belongs to the long line of white-aggro anchors whose value comes not from a game-ending bomb but from the aggregate: a handful of one-drops swinging under a lifegain umbrella that quietly breaks the race math opponents lean on against small-creature strategies. The body does no combat math beyond its stats; the engine is the incidental life, which converts an aggressive board into a resilient one and makes the go-wide plan harder to punish through burn or chip damage. This is a rate that only exists inside a heavily committed white shell, and it is built to make that commitment feel like the point rather than the price.






