Mesa Pegasus
A small white flyer is a thoroughly unremarkable design today, but the banding text box is a window into Alpha's ambitions. Banding was Richard Garfield's attempt to graft tabletop wargame formation rules onto a card game: stack your attackers into a unit, let the defender try to break it, and reassign incoming damage to the toughest body in the formation. The Pegasus is one of the early teaching examples, a 1/1 evasive body whose real job was to ride alongside a larger ground creature and soak up the damage that would otherwise kill it. The rules text the reader sees is most of what made banding infamous: a parenthetical longer than the rest of the card, describing a damage-assignment subsystem that no other mechanic in the game uses. Wizards eventually conceded that banding was a design dead end and moved it to the deprecated list, never printing it on a new card after the early sets. What survives on the Pegasus is a snapshot of when Magic was still negotiating what kind of game it wanted to be: a tactical combat simulation with formations and damage assignment, or the streamlined stack-and-priority game it became. The flying-plus-banding combination, which lets the creature band in the air with other flyers or on the ground with a single non-bander, captures that lost design direction in miniature.















