Woodland Bellower
A six-mana 6/5 that pays for itself by going and finding the engine you actually wanted. The body is the wrapper; the search clause is the design idea, and it is a deliberately tight tutor: nonlegendary, green, mana value three or less, put onto the battlefield rather than into your hand. That last detail is the whole point, and it rescues the card from being a slow tutor stapled to a beater. You are not paying six to dig for a card, you are paying six to put a second creature in play immediately, so the body and the toolbox target arrive on the same turn, on the same clock. The mana value cap and the color requirement are the restrictions doing the balancing work: they fence the tutor off from the format-warping three-drops in other colors and keep it pointed at value engines, ramp dorks, and silver-bullet utility bodies. The nonlegendary clause closes the obvious abuse of chaining into a build-around commander. What it represents is green's recurring design problem solved sideways: the color that does not draw cards and does not counter spells still needs a way to assemble its toolbox on demand, so the selection is buried inside a hard-to-interact-with creature and the advantage comes attached to a body instead of a card-advantage spell. Find your hatebear, your sacrifice fodder, your second ramp piece; the 6/5 was never the reason you cast it.
