Segovian Leviathan
The joke is the scale. Segovia is the plane Magic invented to host miniature versions of creatures whose names usually promise something enormous, and the design follows the premise to its logical end: a Leviathan that costs five mana, carries a 3/3 body, and slips past blockers on Islandwalk rather than crashing through them. The type line does the heavy lifting that the stats refuse to. Set this next to the Leviathans of its era, the eight-mana sea monsters with trample and untap costs that asked you to sacrifice Islands just to attack, and the choice becomes clear: this is the tribe stripped of its drawbacks and its grandeur in equal measure, leaving only the evasion keyword that thematically belongs to a sea creature. Islandwalk is static evasion, not conditional on combat math or a trigger: against an opponent on Islands the body is simply unblockable, which is the rate's quiet argument, and against everything else the 3/3 is filler. The whole thing functions as flavor exercise first and creature second, which is why it has surfaced in casual products whenever Wizards wants a cheap Leviathan that does not break the curve. The mechanical body without the tribe would be unremarkable; the tribe is the entire point.





