Kavu Chameleon
Born into an era obsessed with gold cards and five-color manabases, this is the contrarian hiding inside that thesis. Where the surrounding designs rewarded splashing every color, here is a green beater whose color-changing ability exists to slip the color-specific hosers that a color-soup environment invites. The that turns it any color until end of turn was never an offensive tool; it is a defensive valve against the era's color-locked removal and protection. A "destroy target green creature" or a circle of protection from green stops being a clean answer the moment the Chameleon becomes blue in response, paying one mana to step outside the question being asked. The uncounterable clause is the other half of that anti-interaction package, ensuring the body resolves through the heavy counter-magic the same multicolor metagame encouraged. Together the two lines make a 4/4 that is hard to touch on the stack and slippery once it lands, a creature built less to win races than to survive a format designed to punish anything that committed to a single color. It is evasion through identity rather than through a keyword: the threat does not dodge by becoming bigger or harder to block, but by changing what it is faster than its answers can adapt. That design idea has resurfaced in odd corners since, but rarely so cleanly tied to the conditions that produced it.


