Dawn Gryff
A 2/2 flier for three mana is one of white's oldest fixed points, a body the common slot has returned to since long before keyword soup and enter-the-battlefield triggers crowded the rarity. The template persists because the rate is the whole design, not a starting point waiting for embellishment: two power in the air at a cost the game has long agreed is fair for it. The Hippogriff type line is flavor, not function. What the card actually offers is evasion with nothing to manage: it attacks favorably into a ground stall and trades up against the X/1 fliers that share its airspace. As filler goes, this is the honest kind. No synergy hook, no hidden upside, no text to track on the stack; just a creature that does its one job and prices itself accordingly. The interesting thing about a card like this is that it never goes obsolete the way a marginal value creature does, because there is no rate to be undercut, only a baseline to be matched.

