Mul Daya Channelers
The whole design hangs on a single piece of public information: your library's top card, revealed, doing two jobs at once. When it's a creature, the body swells to a 5/5 for three mana; when it's a land, you have a Coalition Relic stapled to that same body. The tension is that you almost never get both, and you control which one you get only as well as you control your deck's draw order. That is the real cost here. A 2/2 for three mana with no top card to leverage is a blank, so the design rewards thinking about library composition the way a fetchland or a scry effect does: not just what you draw, but what sits on top after you draw it. Top-of-library manipulation turns the variance into a dial, which is why this Elf has always lived in decks that already want to know their next card. The drawback is also a gift, because revealing your top card hands your opponent information they may overvalue or misread. This is green's classic bargain for above-rate stats: surrender the privacy of the draw step, trade certainty for explosiveness, and reward the deckbuilder who sculpts the unseen half of the library rather than just the hand.
