Nature's Rhythm
Green tutors that put the creature directly onto the battlefield have always carried a tax somewhere: a life payment, a whole extra turn of ramp, a body left behind. This one hides its cost inside the X, so the search scales cleanly with whatever mana you can pour into it, and the creature arrives untapped and ready without the drawback text green usually attaches. That alone would make it a competent Green Sun's Zenith cousin. What separates it is the second life the card gets from harmonize: once it hits the graveyard, you can recast it, and the tap-to-reduce clause turns your board into fuel. A single big attacker's worth of power shaves generic off the harmonize cost, which means the creatures you already tutored up become the payment for tutoring the next one. That loop is the design tension worth sitting with: the more you resolve the front half, the cheaper the back half becomes, but every tap toward the discount is a creature not attacking or blocking. The mechanic rewards a board wide enough to spare bodies and deep enough to want a second fetch. It is a self-refueling toolbox that asks you to spend the resources it just handed you, and the graveyard recast means the answer to "I already used my tutor" is now "not necessarily."



