Sabretooth Tiger
A vanilla-plus body from an era when first strike on a 2/1 was a fair rate rather than an afterthought. Everything the card is worth lives in the combat step: first strike lets a fragile two-power attacker eat any blocker with two or fewer toughness before it can swing back, so the 2/1 frame reads less like a weakness and more like the price paid for the keyword. In its time, that meant a red creature that could attack into a board of small blockers and come out ahead, the kind of evasion-by-combat-math that aggressive red leaned on before burn and haste crowded the curve. The design carries no triggers, no activated ability, just a keyword printed on a frame the budget never stretched past. That same restraint is why it aged into a footnote. Later red two-drops with a relevant stat line or a death trigger do this job better, and the first strike that justified the rate stopped being a premium once two-toughness blockers became the floor rather than the ceiling. It stands now as the baseline against which red's small first strikers were measured: a clean, unembellished statement of how much combat reliability one keyword was worth.






