Naga Eternal
A 3/2 for three mana with no text sits below the standard vanilla curve, where three mana buys a 3/3, and blue does not even get that math as a rule. So the interesting thing is not the rate: it is why anyone printed a blue creature this plain at all. The answer is that blue's creature costs have historically been the color's tax, priced high to keep it honest for the phases where it already dominates. A workmanlike 3/2 that just attacks is, for blue, a small act of permission rather than a discount. It exists to give a tempo-leaning deck a body to deploy on curve while counters and card advantage do the heavy lifting, the kind of filler that only earns its slot behind a slim clock worth protecting. Nothing on the card generates value, so its whole use is as pressure that costs almost no attention to play. The Zombie Snake type and the naga name gesture at a plane's undead serpent-folk, but the design underneath is deliberately generic: a beater whose entire job is to be cheap enough to slot and aggressive enough to matter, and nothing more. That plainness is the point. It fills the narrow band between "too weak to play" and "worth a real card," and it does not pretend to be anything past that line.
