Gwaihir the Windlord
The cost reduction is the whole design idea, and it aims this six-drop at a very specific archetype: a deck that can reliably burn through two cards in a single turn and then convert that gas into a threat. Drop the price to four for having drawn twice, and a 4/4 flier with vigilance stops being a top-end curve-topper and becomes a payoff for the same draw engines that usually build toward a slow, reactive plan. Card advantage and battlefield pressure normally pull against each other in these colors; the discount stitches them together, letting a hand that spent early turns refilling cash that work in for a body that lands ahead of schedule and keeps blocking while it attacks. The catch worth naming is that the discount is yours to earn on your own turn: there is no flash here, so the draws that unlock the discount have to happen before you cast it, which rewards cantrips and draw effects front-loaded into your own main phases rather than reactive instant-speed play. The Bird lord clause is the smaller half and honest about it, handing vigilance only to your other Birds while this one already carries the keyword natively. That reads as the seed of a tribal subtheme the card does not otherwise demand you assemble. Strip the flock away and it settles into a clean shape: an evasive vigilant threat that gets cheaper the harder your deck was already trying to draw.

