Twenty-Toed Toad
A joke card built as a genuinely functional alternate win condition, and the design is unusually coherent for a gag. The number twenty does triple duty: it lifts your maximum hand size to twenty, it caps the counter threshold at twenty, and it names the two ways the Toad closes a game. Every clause points at the same absurd finish line. The counter path and the hand path are two separate on-ramps to the same destination, and the card hands you tools to walk down both at once. Attacking with two or more creatures grows the Toad toward its counter goal and refills your hand toward the twenty-card ceiling, so a wide board doesn't just apply pressure; it fuels the finish directly. The catch is that both thresholds sit absurdly high, and the game-winning check only fires when the Toad itself attacks, which means the whole machine hinges on keeping a fragile 3/3 alive through the many turns it takes to stockpile counters or cards. It is a punchline dressed as a value engine: a Frog Wizard that promises to win the game if you can babysit it long enough to reach a genuinely silly number.


