Sage's Row Denizen
A mill engine disguised as a tribal payoff. The trigger fires not on this creature's own arrival but on every subsequent blue creature you commit to the board, which reframes the card from a one-shot effect into an accumulator: the more your deck leans on a flood of blue bodies, the steeper each new creature's mill tax becomes. Two cards per trigger reads as trivial in isolation, but the design rewards width over height, asking you to play many cheap blue creatures rather than a few large ones, and that pull toward a go-wide blue build is the actual cost of the engine. A 2/3 body is just enough to survive early combat and hold the line while the mill totals quietly stack up. The Denizen belongs to a recurring idea in blue mill design: pair the slow inevitability of grinding a library with a creature-based tempo plan, so the deck that fills the board is the same deck that empties the opponent's deck. It does not win on its own and never tries to; it is the meter that turns each subsequent blue creature into a fraction of a turn off someone's library, and it asks the deckbuilder to decide how hard to commit to that conversion rate.

