Shambling Strider
Pay one red and one green, and this Yeti swaps a point of toughness for a point of power, sliding from a 5/5 toward a 6/4, 7/3, and beyond in a single combat. Every activation commits the body to a bigger hit while making it flimsier on defense, so the choice each turn is whether you are racing for damage or holding a wall. The toughness loss prices the upside without letting it spiral for free; you cannot grow the attacker without surrendering the blocker. What dates the card is the activation cost itself. The set leaned into allied-color pairings and frequently bolted abilities onto monocolored creatures that demanded a second color of mana to use, a way of rewarding two-color manabases without putting that second color on the casting cost. So here is a creature you cast on green alone that quietly wants red beside it, a structural nudge toward red-green aggression at a time when multicolor support was an exception rather than a design pillar. The flexibility is modest by modern standards, but the thinking behind it (a green body that fights better with red mana) anticipated how later multicolor design would make flexibility a deliberate sales pitch rather than an accident of mana symbols.


