Mire Boa
Swampwalk has always belonged to black: the color whose own swamps make it unblockable, the color that builds its evasion out of the lands it shares with its opponents. Handing that trick to a green snake is the quiet provocation here. Green fights through bodies rather than around them, so a two-mana 2/1 that simply cannot be blocked by a player on Swamps reads as borrowed clothing, an effect transplanted from a color it was never meant to live in. The regeneration is the half that feels native: green has long been the color that shrugs off removal and survives the brawl it picks, and pairing that resilience with conditional evasion gives the snake a tidy self-sufficiency, pushing damage and then refusing to die for the privilege. Neither ability is remarkable on its own. The swampwalk is dead against any opponent who never cracks a black source, and the regeneration taxes you a mana every turn you want the insurance. What makes the design worth remembering is the trespass behind it: a color-bending experiment of its era that took ordinary keywords and asked which color actually owns them, then answered by lending one of black's signature tricks to green to see what the loan revealed.

