Holy Day
Fog in white's clothing, and the asymmetry of that color pie shift is the whole story. Green's Fog established the template in Alpha: zero out the combat step for one green mana, sold as the color's contemplative defensive trick. Porting the same effect into white reframed it. White already had global damage prevention through more expensive enchantments and protection grants; a flash blank of the combat step at the cheapest possible rate belonged to green's stalling identity, not white's rank-and-file soldiering. The reprint history reflects the awkwardness. Fog has been a near-constant presence in core sets and green products; this card has surfaced only sporadically, usually where white needed a specific stalling tool rather than as a pillar of the color's identity. The design question it quietly poses, and which the modern color pie has mostly answered against, is whether pure combat negation is a white effect at all, or whether white's version of "nothing happens this turn" should cost more and do more (a Dawn Charm, a Reverent Mantra, an Angel's Grace). It is an artifact of an earlier era's looser color boundaries, when a keyword effect could be ported across colors on a flavor justification alone, before the pie hardened around who gets to say no to combat and at what price.







