Maze Glider
The reward stapled onto this body answers a real problem with evasion in a gold-heavy deck: your two-color creatures hit hard but trip over each other on the ground, and the opponent's blockers do not care how splashy your mana base is. Handing the whole multicolored half of your board a single keyword turns a wide spread of gold midrange threats into an air force, a far more pointed payoff than the generic anthem these decks usually lean on. The static ability checks colors, not color identity: any creature with two or more colors in its mana cost or color indicator qualifies, which includes hybrid creatures (multicolored by the rules no matter which mana you actually spent to cast them) but excludes a monocolored creature whose off-color activated abilities give it a wider identity. Only your true single-color cards stay grounded. The catch is the price. At six mana for a 3/5 flier, this is top-end, and by the time it lands you need a board already built out of gold creatures for the grant to mean anything, so the deckbuilding tax precedes the payoff. There is a quiet self-reference wrinkle: the Glider is monocolored blue, so it owes its own evasion to its printed flying, not its static buff. The whole package reads as a finisher built to reward what wedge and five-color boards already want to do: flood the table with gold cards, then get them over the top.
