Protector of Gondor
Four mana for four power spread across two bodies is the archetypal go-wide common: nothing here bends a format, but the split-stat design is doing exactly what token generators of this shape are for. The math is the point. A 3/3 alongside a 1/1 gives you two attackers instead of one, a second creature for convoke or sacrifice fodder, an anthem target that scales better than a single fat body, and a chump blocker you can afford to lose. It plays into the classic tension every white token maker navigates: a lone 4/4 for the same cost trades cleaner in combat, but two smaller bodies play around single-target removal and feed anything that counts creatures rather than measuring them. This is the low-power, high-utility end of that design line, filling out a curve for a deck built to flood the board and profit from breadth rather than any individual threat. The flavor tracks the mechanic honestly: a soldier who does not stand alone, arriving with a companion in tow.

