Flying Men
The proof-of-concept for evasion as a complete card. Strip everything else away (no relevant creature type at the time, no activated ability, no enters-the-battlefield clause) and what remains is the question: is one mana the right price for a 1/1 that the ground cannot block? Three decades of design have answered yes, cautiously. Suq'Ata Firefly, Welkin Tern, Faerie Miscreant, Triton Shorestalker, Spectral Sailor: every mono-blue one-drop flyer printed since has carried a rider, a tribal hook, or a downside clause, because Wizards decided the naked rate was a ceiling rather than a floor. The card itself sat in the Arabian Nights vault for years before the Vintage Masters reprint pulled it back into legality, and it remains the cleanest benchmark for what a vanilla evasive one-drop costs. The design lesson it taught is not that flying is cheap; it is that flying on a 1/1 body, with no other text, is exactly worth one blue mana, and that anything beyond that has to be paid for elsewhere on the card.

