Raptor Companion
Three power for two mana, purchased entirely with the toughness you gave away: a single point of it, a body that trades down to nearly any blocker and dies to the gentlest sweeper or ping. This is the white weenie template at its most honest. The deck that wants this creature wants to tap out on turn two and swing for three on turn three, and the 3/1 line tells you exactly what that costs: no resilience, no late-game relevance, just early pressure the curve is built to make matter before the board stabilizes. The Dinosaur tag is the only thread connecting it to anything bigger than a beatdown shell, and it does no tribal work on its own beyond occupying a slot. As common-rarity aggression it is fine, replaceable, and sized precisely to its job: a two-drop whose whole function is keeping the pressure curve unbroken while sturdier threats compete for the slots above it.



