Sagu Wildling // Roost Seek
Green has always wanted its land-fixing and its top end to live on the same card without paying twice, and the Omen back half is where this one earns its keep. The reshuffle clause changes the math on a mana-fixer: instead of cashing in an Evolving Wilds and losing the card, or resolving a Coiling Oracle-style body once and moving on, you spend the one-mana half to grab a basic, tuck the whole card back into your library, and get to draw it a second time when a 3/3 flyer matters more than the fixing did. That structure lets a single slot smooth an awkward opening early and become a clean evasive threat with a modest life cushion late, without forcing the choice at draw. What it solves is the old green problem of flood-versus-screw insurance: a card that would rot in hand as a five-drop when you have no board can instead be spent as a land-finder, then returned to relevance once the game stabilizes. As a green common it is workhorse rather than showpiece, the effect kept in check by the front half's fairly plain rate. But the shuffle-back framing is doing quiet deckbuilding work, letting one card occupy two spots on the curve depending on which draw the game hands you.

