Savannah Lions
Two power for one mana, no abilities, no downside: that line broke the era's creature math when 2/2s cost two and most one-drops were 1/1s carrying a penalty. White weenie, in Magic's earliest years, meant this card and the curve it anchored, and the template (two power, one toughness, one white mana, nothing else) became the unit of measurement every cheap beater since has been graded against. Isamaru, Hound of Konda matched the rate with a legend clause. Elite Vanguard was a functional reprint without the cat type. Wild Nacatl beat it by adding upside that demanded a denser color commitment. Monastery Swiftspear surpassed it by changing what a one-drop's job actually was. The card itself fell out of constructed relevance not because it got worse but because the floor for a white one-drop kept rising around it; modern designs give you the 2/1 body and then ask what else it does. What makes this card historically load-bearing is that it established that floor in the first place. Every conversation about whether a new one-drop is "playable" is, downstream, a conversation about whether it clears the bar this one set.

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Other printings
- Foundations#146
- Foundations Jumpstart#249
- The List#DMR-24
- Dominaria Remastered#24
- Dominaria Remastered#270
- Jumpstart 2022#237
- 30th Anniversary Edition#38
- 30th Anniversary Edition#335
Show all 23 other printings
- The List#A25-33
- Masters 25#33
- Masters Edition IV#24
- Ninth Edition#41
- Ninth Edition#41★
- Fourth Edition Foreign Black Border#48
- Fourth Edition#48
- Summer Magic / Edgar#39
- Foreign Black Border#39
- Revised Edition#39
- Intl. Collectors' Edition#39
- Collectors' Edition#39
- Unlimited Edition#39
- Limited Edition Beta#39
- Limited Edition Alpha#38























