Outland Boar
The evasion clause here is a quiet piece of weight-class math. A 4/4 for four in these colors is already a fair rate, but the no-block-by-power-2-or-less restriction turns it into a body that slides past the chaff every grindy board deploys: mana dorks, early blockers, the small utility creatures that normally trade up by gumming the ground. The threshold is set deliberately low, carving out a specific tier of defenders to ignore while leaving the card honestly blockable by anything built to fight a four-mana threat. That is the balancing line. Rather than grant flat unblockability or trample to push through chump blocks, the design picks one segment of the curve to walk past and stops there, which keeps the card from running away with games against decks that have actually invested in their blockers. The result is a workmanlike beater: reliable damage against the decks that crowd the board with cheap creatures, and stoppable by anything that answers threats on its own terms.

