Angelic Blessing
The combat trick with the surprise surgically removed. Cast at sorcery speed during the main phase, it cannot intervene once combat is underway; the +3/+3 and flying have to be committed up front, while the defending player still has a full phase to see the swing coming and arrange blocks around it. That timing window is what lets an effect this large (three power plus evasion) sit at common without warping anything. In practice the flying clause does more lifting than the buff, turning a ground creature into a finisher against a board with no fliers or reach, but again, announced openly rather than sprung mid-combat. Strip away the instant-speed window that defines the trick as a category, and what remains is an honest, readable effect: a beginner can see exactly what it does and exactly when. The card has cycled through beginner and starter products repeatedly for that reason, a stable piece of Magic's pedagogy long after its rate stopped mattering anywhere competitive.

Rules text
Format Status
More formatsFewer formats
Other printings
- Tempest Remastered#1
- Salvat 2011#2
- Tenth Edition#3★
- Tenth Edition#3
- Ninth Edition#2
- Ninth Edition#2★
- Starter 2000#1
- Starter 1999#3










