The Dragon-Kami Reborn // Dragon-Kami's Egg
Most Sagas march toward one payoff and then leave; this one spends its first two chapters seeding the resource its transformed side will spend. Chapters one and two each gain a little life and dig three cards deep, but the important move is the exile: you look at the top three, then bury one face down under a hatching counter, banking exactly the card you want for the back half. You know precisely what you are stashing, so the tension is not luck but commitment: the front half exiles anything, yet only creatures among those exiles can be recast off the death trigger, so a non-creature you tucked away sits there as dead weight, a quiet cost on greedy selection. Chapter three flips the enchantment into a fragile Egg body, and from there any death (the Egg itself or a Dragon you control) lets you cast one of the banked creatures for free. The engine casts from exile rather than reanimating from the graveyard, which sidesteps graveyard hate entirely and keeps the stockpile resilient to sweepers and disruption aimed at the yard. Nothing forces you to wait for combat, either: a free sacrifice outlet turns the death clause into an on-demand trigger, so a deck built to loop deaths can, while a slower deck simply lets its Dragons trade and collects the refunds as they fall. The whole card is a two-part clock: set the trap early, spring it whenever a Dragon dies.




