Landroval, Horizon Witness
Evasion-granting has usually been a one-directional trade: a keyword-counter enchantment, a pump spell that shoves a single threat past the ground, or a global effect that hands flying to your whole board and hopes the math resolves in your favor. This narrows the grant to a single target but ties it to a condition a wide board already wants to meet, namely committing multiple attackers at a player at once. The clause fires only when two or more creatures attack a player specifically, so it stays keyed to a face-race plan; a board dispersed onto planeswalkers or battles gets nothing. When it does fire, it picks one grounded attacker among the crowd and lifts it over the ground blockers. The design tension is worth noticing: a token-flooding white deck rarely wants to spend a card on dedicated evasion, because its plan is presence rather than a single threat, yet that presence is exactly what clogs into a ground stall. Landroval resolves that by making the wide attack the trigger and the airborne attacker the payoff, both at once, without a separate slot. The chosen creature is still attacking, so it deals its damage this combat rather than waiting; it is now airborne, so it dodges ground defenders (though a flier or reach creature can still meet it). The 3/4 flier is no bystander here: it attacks in the air itself, adding to the same swarm it enables, so the body and the ability push in the same direction on a board a white weenie or aristocrats deck was building anyway.

