Ruxa, Patient Professor
Vanilla creatures are the game's oldest joke: a body, a stat line, no text, the thing you leave in the box when anything else is available. This turns that dead space into an axis by treating "no abilities" as a tribe and hanging three distinct rewards on it. Only one of them is a trigger: the recursion, which fires when Ruxa enters or attacks and pulls a blank body back from the yard. The other two are static, always-on effects that quietly rewrite every abilityless creature you control: a +1/+1 anthem scaling the whole squad, and a combat clause letting each of them assign damage as though unblocked. The "no abilities" line is stricter than it first reads. A creature with flying, or trample, or any keyword at all fails the test; so does anything with an activated or triggered ability, or even defender. The pool is any creature that currently has no abilities, whether it's a true vanilla, a blank token, or something an effect has stripped down. That severity is what makes the evasion static so pointed: leakage through blockers on a wall of 2/2s and 3/3s converts an inert board into a genuine clock. The tension resolved here is that vanilla creatures have always been individually weak and collectively pointless; the payoff is entirely collective, so the deckbuilding cost is real. The strategy is subtractive by design. The best cards for this build are the ones every other deck cuts first, and any keyword, any triggered line, any tap-for-mana clause disqualifies a body from all three bonuses.


