Titan of Littjara
A lord printed backward: instead of buffing a type, it joins one and cashes the census. Choosing a creature type on entry means this 6/6 becomes the missing link in decks that were never quite deep enough on one type to justify a payoff: an Elf deck light on Elves, a Merfolk shell built around three or four staples, a soup of assorted synergy pieces that happen to share a creature type here and there. Whatever you pick, the body immediately shares that type, so the enters-and-attacks trigger counts everything else you control that lines up. The looting is where the asymmetry lives: you draw a card for each sharing creature but discard only one total, so a wide board turns each trigger into three, four, five cards for the cost of pitching one. That is net card advantage from a beater, a payoff blue tribal has rarely gotten off a body this size. What makes it sturdier than the average tribal lord is that it doesn't require a tribe to function: it manufactures its own membership on the way in, then rewards whatever overlap already exists. The attack trigger matters as much as the entry one, since a 6/6 that reloads every combat turns a stalled board into a grinding engine, and the type it chose stays locked once it lands.



