Pollywog Symbiote
Mutate lived or died on volume, and this is the engine card that made the volume worth chasing. The mechanic's whole proposition was that stacking creatures onto a single body would generate more triggers than casting them normally, but every mutate spell you cast was still a full-price creature spell that thinned your hand. This 1/3 for two mana answers both problems at once: the cost reduction turns a pile of three- and four-mana mutators into a curve you can actually deploy, and the loot on each mutate cast refuels the hand you're spending down. The body earns its slot too, a durable base worth mutating onto, awkward to trade off in combat and cheap enough to leave mana up for the next mutation. The card is honest about being a build-around: it does nothing outside a deck full of mutate spells, and it asks you to commit to a mechanic that was only ever going to appear in a narrow slice of your card pool. That narrowness is the point. Where most tribal or mechanic payoffs offer a diffuse bonus, this one is a genuine enabler, converting mutate from a fun-but-fragile pile into something that draws cards and lowers its own cost with every casting. It represents the payoff design mutate needed to function as an archetype rather than a novelty.


