Subtlety
The blue Incarnation answers the kind of threat permission was never quite built to handle: the creature or planeswalker you have no counter for, or the one you would rather not spend a full counterspell to stop. Rather than negate the cast, this puts it on the top or bottom of the caster's library, so the tempo swing runs deeper than a hard counter does. You do not just deny it; you strip the mana spent, and at the owner's choice either hand it back as their next draw or bury it under the deck. Because the effect rides a flash flier, the same card can also be an evasive clock that ambushes in combat when there is nothing worth answering. Evoke reframes the whole card: exiling a blue card from hand fires the trigger without ever paying four mana, turning the answer into something close to a counter's cousin at a discount, at the cost of the 3/3 body and a real card. That elasticity, priced high when you want the flier, priced cheap when you want the interaction, is what lets it play as threat or spell depending on the turn. The deliberate seam is the narrow target: it reaches only a creature or planeswalker still waiting to resolve, useless against a resolved permanent, a board wipe, or a burn spell, which keeps a reactive tool from becoming a universal blue answer.







