Tusked Colossodon
A 6/5 with no abilities is a calibration card: it exists to answer a single design question, which is how much raw stats six mana (two of them green) should buy when the budget spends nothing on text. Green has printed this silhouette in one form or another for as long as the game has had a top-of-curve slot to fill, because someone always has to occupy the ceiling for a no-text body at a clean, unglamorous rate. Set it against the old Craw Wurm benchmark and the numbers tell the story of drift: same power at 6, but a point more toughness, a 6/5 where the ancestor was a 6/4. That extra point is the whole news here, a small nudge in the format's floor for fat. The absence of evasion or a relevant ability is not an oversight but the tariff the card pays to be this large for the cost. The body is the entire offer, and the card asks for nothing in return, which is exactly why it earns a place in the long conversation about how green commons have always defined the baseline for raw size without complicating it.
