Seller of Songbirds
Three mana for a 1/2 and a 1/1 flier: two bodies and two power, the unglamorous arithmetic that white commons have always run on. The split is what makes the package more resilient than a plain 2/3. Trade the ground body in combat, hold back the Bird, and you have already banked the full return; a removal spell aimed at either half pays for one card and gets you half of one. Send the flier off the front and you keep an evasive threat that survives whatever the opponent had been holding for the bigger body. The design also feeds anything that counts bodies rather than stats. A go-wide token shell adds two to the swarm; a sacrifice deck gets two pieces of fodder; a blink effect re-runs the enter clause and mints another Bird, turning a modest common into a repeatable two-for-one. None of this is loud, and it was never meant to be. The flier is the part that matters: ground stalls are exactly the board states where a single point of evasive damage closes a game the rest of the board cannot, and this is a clean way to staple that point onto a curve-filler creature without asking the deck to do anything clever.


