Shambling Attendants
A printed eight-mana frame collapses into something a black deck can actually afford once the graveyard is deep enough to feed it. Pay the cost down and you get a deathtoucher big enough behind to wall off aggressive starts cold: any creature that runs into the 3/5 body dies regardless of size, and the 5 toughness means most attackers cannot force through anyway. That defensive posture separates it from the marquee delve cards of its era, which spent graveyard fuel on cheap, efficient offense. Here the same resource buys a stalling piece that taxes the attacker on every swing rather than closing the game. The tension sits in the math: every card exiled to shrink the cost is material a grindier plan might rather hold, and delve cards all compete for the same yard. So it lands in an odd register, a top-end body meant to hit the table like a two- or three-drop but earning its keep by clogging the ground. The eight in the corner looks like filler on the scan; watch a board state where nothing can profitably attack into a deathtouch wall, and the printed cost stops mattering entirely.


