Radiant Grace // Radiant Restraints
Auras have always carried a structural flaw: kill the enchanted creature and the Aura dies with it, handing the removal player a clean two-for-one. This one flips whose loss it is. The front face is workmanlike combat glue, a small buff plus vigilance you happily staple to something disposable, because the real payoff lands when that creature dies rather than while it lives. When the enchanted body dies, the Aura hits the graveyard as any Aura does, but its death trigger fires and returns it to the battlefield transformed: flipped to a Curse, re-attached to an opponent, taxing every creature they control by making it enter tapped. That trigger inverts the usual math. The moment Auras are normally at their worst (the enchanted body trading away) becomes the moment this one cashes out, converting your loss into a persistent tempo drag on a chosen opponent. It rewards leaning into combat you don't mind losing, a decision most Auras never ask you to make. The transform frame does the mechanical heavy lifting here: both halves live on the battlefield, but the front reads enchant creature and the back reads enchant player, so a single card pivots from offensive enabler to disruptive engine simply by changing what it hangs off of. It is one of the cleaner uses of double-faced permanents to keep an Aura valuable at precisely the point Auras are built to fall apart.

