Pearl-Ear, Imperial Advisor
Auras have always carried the same structural risk: you invest a spell into a permanent, and if that permanent leaves, you have paid twice for one board slot. This fox stacks two answers to that problem into a single midrange body. Affinity for Auras turns the enchantment side of a deck into a snowballing discount, where each Aura already on the table shaves the next one's cost, so a board that survives a turn makes every follow-up cheaper rather than more exposed. The draw trigger then rebuilds the card economy Auras normally bleed: any Aura you point at something already modified (an Equipment carrier, a creature wearing an Aura, a permanent with counters) refunds a card, converting the classic two-for-one liability into a replacement engine. That the trigger keys off "modified" rather than just Auras is the quiet width here; it reaches into Equipment and counter strategies that never touched enchantment payoffs before, and it sits in the same command over Auras, Equipment, and counters that white voltron has been circling for years. The 3/4 lifelink body matters because it lets the engine start attacking without falling behind, and it gives the deck a reason to want its creature modified in the first place. This is white's Auras-matter payoff built as a self-sustaining card advantage piece rather than a fragile build-around, which is the reversal that makes it worth the legend slot.




