TCG Playability
Legendary Creature — Bird
Whenever one or more Birds you control attack, look at that many cards from the top of your library. You may put one of them into your hand. Then put any number of land cards from among them onto the battlefield tapped and the rest into your graveyard. Landfall — Whenever a land you control enters, Choco gets +1/+0 until end of turn.
Choco, Seeker of Paradise is a versatile three-mana legendary creature that serves as both a powerful card advantage engine and a compelling win condition for decks built around flying creatures and land ramp strategies. This Bird's unique ability generates exceptional value whenever your aerial forces attack, allowing you to dig through your library and selectively put lands directly onto the battlefield while filtering your deck—a combination that seamlessly combines mana acceleration with card selection and hand development. The landfall ability provides consistent offensive pressure, turning each land drop into incremental damage that can quickly overwhelm opponents while you're simultaneously advancing your mana base and library manipulation. Choco excels in Standard and Pioneer creature-based ramp decks that emphasize Birds and flying strategies, particularly in Bant or Simic color combinations where you can leverage both blue's card draw support and green's land acceleration. The card fits naturally into aggressive landfall strategies, flyer-focused midrange shells, and even Commander decks centered on Bird synergies or lands matter themes. Because Choco operates across multiple formats from Standard through Legacy and Vintage, it appeals to casual and competitive players alike who appreciate efficient legendary creatures that reward specific deckbuilding approaches. Players should prioritize this card if they're building around flying creatures, exploring Bant midrange strategies, or seeking a legendary creature that generates overwhelming value in the mid-to-late game while functioning as a legitimate threat that must be answered immediately to prevent runaway card advantage.
Illustrated by Miho Midorikawa