Thorn of the Black Rose
Most creatures that hand you the monarchy leave you to defend the crown yourself; this one arrives already dressed for guard duty. The title changes hands one way in combat: an attacker connects with the current monarch and takes the throne. Deathtouch on a 1/3 frame speaks directly to that threat. Three toughness lets it survive a stray small attacker, and deathtouch means anything it blocks dies for the trouble, often without the assassin dying in return. An opponent looking to punch through for the crown has to weigh whether the extra card per turn is worth feeding a creature into a block that kills it and buys them nothing. The wrinkle worth stating plainly: an attacker that Thorn blocks does not steal the crown (it never lands its hit), and an attacker that gets through was never blocked, so the deathtouch never touches the theft itself. The body is a deterrent against the assault, not an interrupt of a successful one. And the crown is never locked to the creature: removal that kills the assassin does not strip the monarch designation from you (the title belongs to the player, not the body), but it clears the guard, and the throne is contestable again the moment the blocker is gone. What the card sells is not permanence but a raised toll: the assassin standing over its own coronation, daring the table to pay it.




