Shared Triumph
Most tribal anthems pick the lord and the type for you: Goblin King pumps Goblins, Elvish Champion pumps Elves, and the body comes attached as a tax. This one decouples the buff from the body entirely. It is a static lord effect with no creature stapled on, a choice made on resolution rather than a fixed printed line. That trade has real consequences. You lose the toughness and the chump-block the creature lords offer, and you give up the ability to commit a threat to the board. What you buy is flexibility: the same enchantment supports Goblins, Soldiers, Elves, or whatever tribe the deck is built around, chosen at the moment it enters. The +1/+1 stacks with itself, so two copies turn a tribe of one-drops into a clock that outraces removal-light decks before they stabilize. The design tension here is between resilience and modularity: a creature lord dies to a removal spell, an enchantment lord sits under most of an aggro deck's interaction and keeps pumping. For a tribal aggressive shell that wants to flood the board cheaply and push damage, the absence of a body is the point, not the cost. It asks the deck to bring its own creatures and asks the spell only to make them bigger.
