Grey Havens Navigator
The rate is deliberately ordinary; the interesting part is when you get to deploy it. A three-mana 3/2 that scries on the way in reads like curve filler until the flash reframes it as an end-of-turn play that costs your opponent nothing to bait and everything to walk into. Left up on their turn, it either ambushes an attacker, drops in as a surprise blocker before combat damage, or simply commits to the board once their turn has passed, all while smoothing your next draw with the scry. That last point is the quiet part: a flash creature that also filters converts a passed turn into an information turn, so the mana you leave open is never fully wasted even when nothing bites. The Elf Pilot typing gestures at a crew-and-vehicles subtheme rather than any tribal payoff, and the body is small enough that it lives and dies by tempo rather than combat math. This is a shape blue has printed in various sizes since its early days: a two-power-plus flash body stapled to a minor selection effect, priced for players who would rather spend mana reactively than tap out on their own turn.

