Naga Fleshcrafter
Clone effects usually stop at the copy: you pay the mana, you get another one of the best thing on the table, and the transaction ends. This one splits its life into two acts. The front half is a straightforward battlefield clone, a body that arrives as whatever is worth arriving as. From the graveyard, the renew activation does something more ambitious than mere recursion: it turns your entire board into a single chosen creature for the turn, adding a +1/+1 counter to the target so that one creature keeps a real gain after the copy layer wears off at end of turn. That is a mass-copy effect (functionally a one-shot Mirrorweave you build toward rather than hold) grafted onto a card that has already been a creature once. Crucially, the two modes are not a fork you must choose between: because the second ability fires from the graveyard, the natural line is to cast the clone, let it die, and then renew, collecting both effects off one card across two turns. The sorcery-speed leash is the real constraint. This cannot ambush a combat step or answer a removal spell mid-stack, so the payoff lives on your main phase, before attackers commit or after a board has assembled. The nonlegendary clause on the renew target does the other work, pointing the card at a wide, uniform board rather than a single premium legend.



