Hakim, Loreweaver
An Aura toolbox stapled to a flier, built around a window most enchantment recursion never bothered to define: the upkeep. The reanimation clause is fenced on three sides at once. It only works during your upkeep, it only works while Hakim isn't already wearing an Aura, and it only ever lands the Aura on Hakim himself. That last restriction is the load-bearing one. This is not a generic enchantment-return engine; it is a self-suiting machine that bolts graveyard Auras onto its own back. The "isn't enchanted" clause checks only at activation, though, so a player who holds priority can chain multiple activations before any Aura resolves, dressing Hakim in a whole wardrobe in a single upkeep rather than one piece per turn. The third ability is the release valve: tapping to destroy every Aura attached to Hakim resets the condition, so the design loops between equip and strip rather than gumming up on a permanent Aura. The flavor reads as a curator dressing and undressing himself with stolen enchantments, and the mechanics hold that fantasy precisely. What it asks for is an Aura suite that rewards being reattached, the cheaper and more disposable the better, since each return costs only two mana. The 2/4 flying body is enough to survive a Lightning Bolt and keep the cargo relevant on offense, but it carries no protection of its own; a single Doom Blade or Path to Exile sends the whole assembly back to the graveyard. The card is a chassis: it works exactly as well as the Auras you feed it, and not one increment better.
