Stitched Assistant
A 3/2 for three that arrives asking a question: is there a creature on your board worth trading for a card? Say yes and the exploit sacrifice fires on entry, converting a spent token, a mana dork past its usefulness, or a creature already marked to die into scry 1 then a draw. The optionality is the whole balancing act. Because the sacrifice is a "may," the payoff cannot fire without paying for it, but it also never forces you to give up a body you would rather keep. When the math is against you, exploit simply goes unused and you keep a plain beater. This is a sacrifice-for-value engine where the fodder is the point, rewarding a wide board built to feed it over a single expensive creature you would regret losing. The scry-before-draw ordering rewards a closer look: you filter first, so a dead card sitting on top can be shipped to the bottom before the replacement arrives, sharpening the quality of what you actually see. Small returns, but they compound in a deck that generates disposable bodies faster than it can profitably attack with them.

