Silverchase Fox
Enchantment removal on a body, with the body sized to actually trade and the answer held in reserve. This is the maindeckable version of disenchant: a 2/2 that blocks or attacks like any other early creature, then converts into exile-based enchantment removal the turn you draw a problem you cannot race. The sacrifice clause does the heavy lifting, since exiling rather than destroying sidesteps recursion and any death triggers the enchantment might carry, and the two-mana activation means the answer is rarely free but always available. What makes it valuable is the timing window: the fox sits on the battlefield as a real card doing a real job until an opposing enchantment shows up, at which point it pays a tax to remove it without ever drawing dead. That is the trade a dedicated answer card cannot make. A Disenchant in your opening hand against a creature deck is a blank; this never is, because the floor is a serviceable two-drop. The cost is patience and mana: you commit the creature to the board early, then pay again to cash it in, and the enchantment has to actually arrive for the second half to matter. It is the answer-on-a-stick template applied to a category of permanent that white has always wanted to keep maindeckable rather than relegate to the sideboard.



