Recruitment Officer
White aggro rarely gets a good two-power one-drop that also has something to do once the curve tops out, and this one solves both halves of the problem in a single slot. Early, it beats down at a rate that white one-drops have historically struggled to reach; late, when the hand runs dry and the extra lands are useless, it spends four mana to dig four deep and refill with another small creature. The mana-value cap of three is the constraint doing the balancing work: it keeps the ability tethered to the same low curve the deck is already built around, so what you find is another threat rather than a value bomb. That alignment is the whole appeal. A card that is a live topdeck on turn one and a mana sink on turn seven asks nothing of a mono-white aggressive deck it would not already be doing, and the reveal-a-creature clause means it stays useful in the mirror grind where both players have run out of cards. It is the kind of design that looks unremarkable in a vacuum and turns out to be exactly what a weenie deck was missing: a card that never sits dead in hand.



