Uktabi Wildcats
The body pays for its own size in land, then asks you to feed that same land back to keep it alive. Power and toughness scale with Forests, which makes it a payoff for going deep on green sources, but the regeneration clause is where the design tension lives: every shield you raise shrinks the creature you are shielding, since the Forest you sacrifice was also a point of power and a point of toughness. Regenerate once and you have a smaller cat; regenerate twice and you may have spent the very board state that justified casting it. That self-cannibalizing loop holds a five-mana variable beater in check, and it plays as a deliberate green answer to a recurring problem of the era: how do you give mono-green a survivable fatty without handing it an indestructible one. The cost is paid in the resource that built the creature, so durability and size sit in permanent opposition. The whole card speaks to green's early identity, where land was both the engine and the fuel, and where a big body was supposed to come with strings rather than safety.



