Errant and Giada
Card advantage that gates itself. The top-of-library access here is not the open-ended draw that Future Sight granted; it filters strictly by two keywords the card itself carries, flash and flying, so the spells it lets you cast off the top are exactly the ones that share this creature's evasive, instant-speed temperament. You still pay for what you cast: the engine widens what you can play, not how cheaply you play it. That constraint is the design's quiet elegance. You are not seeing your whole deck, you are seeing the half of it built around dodging combat and holding priority. Flash on the body means the whole package deploys as a surprise blocker or an end-step threat, and once it resolves it turns your library into a rolling stream of Angels and reactive spells you can commit without revealing your hand. The result is a two-color legend that rewards a deck built to one specification (fill it with flyers and flash spells) and does very little in a pile that ignores that direction. Where older top-of-library effects handed you raw cards to do with as you liked, this one hands you a curated feed, and the curation is the whole strategic axis. Two names in the title, one Human and one Angel fused into a single body, and the engine reads as the union of both: the Human's instant-speed sensibility and the Angel's flight, printed as the exact filter on what your library may offer up.



