Pattern of Rebirth
Death becomes a payment plan rather than a cost. A conventional tutor charges you a card and mana to find the creature you want; this Aura inverts the sequence, attaching itself to a creature you already control and cashing the body in when it dies. The search has no mana value cap and puts the card straight onto the battlefield, which means the dying creature's stats are irrelevant to the reward: enchant a token, a one-drop, anything you can profitably sacrifice, and what comes back is the single strongest creature in your library, for free. That severs the tutor from its usual deckbuilding tax entirely. The design has long supported combo shells built around feeding the enchanted creature to a sacrifice outlet on demand, looping the trigger into a chain that resolves on whatever finisher the deck is hiding. The friction left in place is the death requirement: the creature has to actually die, which roots the card in a graveyard-and-sacrifice context and bakes in a one-trigger delay before any payoff lands. So it is a four-mana enchantment that produces no immediate board impact, and that deferred reward is the only thing holding it back. What it really offers is a tutor with no ceiling on what it can find, postponed by exactly one death, and the decks that want a ceiling-free search have always been willing to arrange that death on their own terms.


