Sumala Rumblers
Two go-wide mechanics that usually live in separate decks, stapled together on one body. A power equal to your creature count wants a wide board; myriad, which spins off a tapped-and-attacking copy per opponent when this attacks, wants a wide board of its own to punish a full table. The wrinkle is that they compound each other in a way the rate hides: each myriad token is itself a fresh copy that counts its own creatures at the moment its power is set, so a swing that already fields a crowd fans out into multiple attackers that each hit for the size of that crowd, spread across every opponent at once. The four-toughness base keeps it from folding to a single burn spell before it gets there, but the power line means an empty board leaves it a * that reads as almost nothing: this is a payoff, not an enabler, and it does no work until the rest of the deck has already done theirs. Myriad has always been a multiplayer keyword by construction (its tokens vanish at end of combat and it does nothing extra in a duel), which pins this squarely as a build-around for tables of three or more, where a token-flooded board turns one attack step into a symmetrical beating that scales with exactly the thing the card was already asking you to assemble.
