Courier Hawk
Vigilance on a small flier is the quiet design at work here: a 1/2 body too fragile to win exchanges, yet asked to hold the ground while it chips in for one through the air. That pairing is the textbook common-rarity utility flier, the kind that fills out a white curve by attacking and blocking on the same turn without ever threatening to dominate either job. The flying keeps it relevant against other evasive creatures; the vigilance means it can answer a ground attacker the turn after it swings, so its controller is never forced to choose between pressure and defense. Nothing about the rate is meant to excite: two toughness survives a little incidental contact but trades into almost nothing meaningful, and the clock it represents is slow by design. What it offers is reach into the air on a body that never lowers its guard, a humble piece of the white-weenie toolkit that earns its slot by covering both halves of a turn rather than excelling at either.

