War Mammoth
Trample arrived in Magic as new vocabulary, and a 3/3 for carrying nothing else was how the keyword got taught: a body big enough to matter, an ability whose whole job was to demonstrate what "trample" meant when a chump blocker stepped in front of it. Three decades of green creature design have left that price behind. Green has spent that time pushing the same archetype (a midsized trampler that punches through small blockers) down the curve, and what cost four mana here now buys far more body with more keywords stapled on. But the design DNA is the throughline of green's creature pricing. Every green beater since (Blastoderm, Steel Leaf Champion, Tarmogoyf) is measured against an unspoken baseline this card helped set: a vanilla frame, a relevant keyword, and a mana cost the format will eventually find embarrassing. The historical interest is not what this card does, but what it was allowed to charge for doing it, and how quickly the design language moved past that benchmark.















