Benalish Hero
The cheapest legal entry point to banding, and that was the whole assignment: a one-mana white 1/1 whose body asks nothing of the manabase and almost nothing of the tempo plan, so the keyword could be taught on the lowest-stakes possible chassis. Banding is the rule the rest of Alpha's combat math was built around. It lets the attacking or blocking player redirect a creature's damage assignment among its bandmates, which turns what looks like a chump-block into a damage-pool puzzle: the attacker no longer decides where their creature's damage lands. Stapling that to a Plains-cost body whose only printed line is the keyword itself was deliberate. The card does nothing else; it only has to survive long enough to band with something larger, at which point the opposing combat arithmetic collapses. It descends from the white-weenie team-up, where small bodies derive their value from how they fight together rather than from anything they do alone. Banding itself was retired from new design within a few years: the reminder text was a perennial source of confusion, and the damage-assignment rewrite buried what little intuition the mechanic had. That is why this card and its kin read today as artifacts of a combat system Magic chose not to keep, a fossil from the era when a one-mana white creature was expected to carry a full paragraph of rules to explain itself.

Rules text
Format Status
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Other printings
- 30th Anniversary Edition#4
- 30th Anniversary Edition#301
- Masters Edition#5
- Fifth Edition#10
- Fourth Edition#7
- Fourth Edition Foreign Black Border#7
- Summer Magic / Edgar#4
- Foreign Black Border#4












