Dimensional Infiltrator
A two-mana flash flier is already a clean evasive body for a tempo deck; the colorless activated ability is what marks this as a creature built for a specific kind of war. The clause exiles the top card of an opponent's library, one card at a time, which reads as slow until you notice what it feeds: the Eldrazi processor package of its era, the cards that consume exiled cards as fuel rather than letting them rot in a graveyard. That is the strategic axis, not mill: this is putting ammunition into exile for another piece to spend. The bounce clause is the design's quiet pivot. When the exiled card is a land, the creature can return itself to hand, turning a fragile 2/1 into a repeatable exile engine that dodges sorcery-speed removal and resets on a clock its controller dictates, paying colorless mana so the cost ports into any deck that can produce it. Devoid is doing real work too, not just flavor: with no color, the card sidesteps protection-from-blue effects and color-hosing answers entirely, which matters more for a creature meant to stick around turn after turn than for one that trades and dies. The whole package is the control-leaning face of an Eldrazi shell remembered for its giant beaters: the small, evasive attrition piece that grinds a library into exile while flying damage accrues, rewarding patience over explosiveness, which is exactly why it lived in the margins rather than the headline of those lists.

