Skirk Drill Sergeant
Goblins die constantly: that is the whole premise of the tribe, and this card turns that liability into a dredge engine for the deck's own kind. Every Goblin death, including its own, offers a chance to pay three mana and dig for reinforcements, with the catch that a whiff buries whatever you flip into the graveyard instead of replacing the body lost. The math is deliberately punishing in a vacuum: you are spending mana and risking your top card to maybe replace a creature you already lost, which makes this a payoff that only justifies itself when your library is densely packed with Goblin permanents. Build the deck so the reveal almost always hits and the trigger stops being a gamble and starts being a steady stream of free bodies cresting off the top of your library, each fueling the next death trigger. It is a tribal-density tax dressed as an engine: the more committed you are to the creature type, the cleaner the payoff lands, and the half-hearted Goblin pile gets nothing but a graveyard full of milled spells. Among the wave of Goblin support that defined this era's tribal aggro, this one rewards the sacrifice-heavy, swarm-it-out builds where deaths are not setbacks but resource conversions waiting for a sergeant to bark the order.



