Stromkirk Bloodthief
The trigger keys on any opponent life loss, not combat damage specifically, and that widening is the whole point: a token draining a single point, a Bat pinging in the air, a Vampire's own connect, or an incidental attack tax off some drain effect all satisfy the end-step check identically. The decoupling is deliberate. This card wants a Vampire deck that bleeds the opponent as a byproduct of its normal plan, then converts that bleed into a growing threat, and because the counter targets any Vampire you control, you steer it onto whichever creature matters most that turn rather than fattening the 2/2 itself. The body is unremarkable by design; the value lives in the recurring counter, which stacks turn over turn as long as the aggression keeps flowing. The elegant part is that payoff and enabler share a tribe: the drain effects that flip the condition tend to be Vampires themselves, so the board that satisfies the trigger is also the board that reaps it. It layers incremental permanence onto attrition the deck was already committed to, rewarding a plan that was going to chip away regardless.


