Warren Soultrader
Most sacrifice outlets ask you to pick a payoff: a Viscera Seer scries, a Carrion Feeder grows, an Ashnod's Altar makes colorless mana on the cheap. This one converts each dead creature into ramp and fixing at once, and does it without a mana cost on the activation, only a life payment. That structure matters more than the rate suggests. Because the Treasure is created rather than paid for, the outlet loops cleanly with anything that returns creatures or produces tokens: sacrifice the body, bank a Treasure, and you have generated a mana of any color to reload the engine. The 3/3 body is almost incidental; the card is a free repeatable outlet that turns a graveyard's worth of chaff into a color-fixed mana battery. Life is the only tax, which puts a soft ceiling on how hard you can churn but rarely a meaningful one when the creatures dying are already spent. What it really rewards is density: a board wide with expendable creatures becomes, in a single turn, a pile of Treasures waiting to be cashed. The design sits in the aristocrats lineage that outlets like Nantuko Husk started, but where those cards asked you to build a payoff around the sacrifice, this one is the payoff, quietly stapling ritual-grade acceleration to every death you were going to cause anyway.




