Suspicious Stowaway // Seafaring Werewolf
The transform is the payoff, but this two-drop earns its slot on the front face: an unblockable body that loots on connection is a self-fueling engine for graveyard decks and a mana-neutral filterer for anyone who wants to smooth their draws. The werewolf frame is more than a flavor bonus because the day-side and night-side abilities describe the same creature at two speeds. As the Suspicious Stowaway, each hit loots (draw, then discard), keeping hand size flat while you dig. Flip to the Seafaring Werewolf and the discard clause falls away, so every unblocked swing becomes pure card advantage. That inverts the standard werewolf gamble. Most transform designs from this era ask you to weigh a stronger night body against the danger it hands the opponent to force a flip back; here there is no downside face waiting to punish you, only a better version of the same evasive creature. The daybound and nightbound tension still governs when the switch happens, but for this card it stops being a risk you manage and becomes upside you cannot lose on: happy to flip, equally happy to stay put. The unblockable clause is the throughline that makes both modes worth anything, guaranteeing the trigger fires turn after turn regardless of which side is showing. It is a rare werewolf that treats the transform as a reward rather than a threat you are trying not to provoke.



