Gabriel Angelfire
Few cards capture the design impulse of Legends as cleanly as this one: a legendary angel whose ability is essentially "pick which keyword soup you want today," modeling the set's habit of stacking evergreen and almost-evergreen keywords onto a single body and letting the controller sort it out. The upkeep menu is the structural curiosity. Three of the four options are still in the modern keyword vocabulary; rampage is a fossil, a Legends-era combat mechanic that punished gang-blocking and quietly disappeared from new design once Wizards consolidated its combat math. Including it in the rotation dates the card precisely, but it also reveals the original intent: a toolbox creature that adapted to the board rather than a static threat. The problem is that both halves of the cost are punishing. At seven mana for a 4/4 body, the rate was steep even by 1994 standards; the menu never repays the investment. And the flexibility it does offer is mistimed: the keyword is chosen on your upkeep and locked until your next upkeep, with no way to respond to what the opponent commits to combat. The menu is therefore always a beat behind the board, the worst possible window for flexibility, layered on top of a body that costs far too much. What survives is the silhouette: a named angel with a menu of combat keywords, a proof of concept for a design lineage that runs through later angels who got to keep two or three of those abilities permanently stapled on, at a rate that actually justifies the keyword count.



