Llanowar Mentor
The card-advantage math is the whole tension here: each activation converts a card from hand into a permanent green source, a one-for-one trade at face value, except the permanent it leaves behind is the most famous mana dork in the game. Every Spellshaper shares the same skeleton (tap, pay a cost, discard a card to mimic a spell's effect), and the discard is the engine in all of them. What sets this one apart is what it mimics: instead of firing off a sorcery-equivalent that resolves and vanishes, it produces a creature token, building a board rather than a one-shot effect. Repeat the activation with enough cards to pitch and you assemble a ramp engine out of a single one-drop, each Llanowar Elves token adding a green source and a 1/1 body. The cost structure keeps it grinding rather than explosive: it taps itself, it wants green up front, and emptying your hand is the price of keeping it running, so the engine moves only as fast as your card flow allows. The discard clause cuts both ways, doubling as fuel for graveyard-minded green decks that want creatures and lands in the bin, turning the dead-card tax into setup. This is a slow flood of mana and bodies, a design that rewards a hand that refills itself over one racing to close the game.

