Outlaw Medic
A blocker that refuses to be a bad trade. Standing across a two-drop white body with three toughness and lifelink, an attacker either bounces off it or trades down into a card for the defender: the death trigger turns every chump-block or removal spell aimed at it into a wash. That is the axis this design lives on, converting the usual downside of a small creature (that it dies) into replacement value, so the tempo cost of playing defense partly refunds itself. The lifelink and the draw reinforce each other from opposite ends of the creature's life: the body gains a point while it survives and cantrips the moment it goes, which makes it a low-variance floor rather than a swing card. It rewards being thrown in front of things and being fed to sacrifice effects alike, since either outlet cashes the trigger. Nothing about the rate is flashy; a 1/3 that gains a point per hit and replaces itself on death is exactly as much as two mana buys. The point is that it never feels like a dead draw and rarely a bad block, a piece of attrition insurance for grindy white decks that want to keep drawing cards while the board stalls.
