Battlegrace Angel
Exalted, the keyword built to reward the player who attacks with a single creature, found one of its most pointed payoffs here. The base mechanic adds +1/+1 to a lone attacker; this Angel stacks a second, identical trigger on top, but redirects the reward from raw size to life total. Attack alone and the attacker grows and drains: a 4/4 flier swinging by itself becomes a 5/5 lifelinker, and the math only widens as you pile more Exalted bodies behind it. That is the design tension the card resolves. A go-wide army wants to swarm; Exalted wants a duel. By attaching lifelink to the solitary-attacker trigger, this Angel makes the slow, one-creature plan pay rent in the resource a grindy white deck cares about most, turning each restrained attack into a swing on the life totals rather than just board damage. It is the rare card that makes choosing not to alpha-strike feel like the aggressive line, since a buffed lone attacker with lifelink can race a wider board on the back of the life it returns. The body does honest work too: flying carries the lifegain over ground stalls, and the Angel feeds its own Exalted triggers when it is the one attacking alone, a self-contained engine that needs no supporting cast to do its job.

