Sun-Spider, Nimble Webber
A tutor stapled to a body is only worth as much as the deck it tutors for, and this one narrows its search to Auras and Equipment: the two card types Voltron builds live and die by. The enter trigger fetches the piece you need to the hand rather than the battlefield, so the card is a setup engine, not a payoff, handing you the right sword or enchantment and leaving the equipping and enchanting for later turns. What makes the body more than a delivery mechanism is the conditional flying: a 3/2 that can only take to the air on your own turn, which is exactly the window a Voltron threat cares about. It swings over blockers when it attacks and sits earthbound and vulnerable when the opponent's turn comes, a deliberate asymmetry that keeps the evasion honest without gating it behind an activation cost. The Spider Human Hero typing and the deliberately fragile toughness point at what this is built to be: not a resilient standalone beater but the assembly hub of a suit-up strategy, the creature you protect and load up because it found the pieces the moment it arrived. The lone hybrid mana symbol does quiet but real work: castable in mono-white, mono-blue, or any deck touching either color, it lets the fetch-and-suit-up plan slot into a wide range of manabases rather than demanding a two-color commitment. Consistency without a color tax is the whole appeal: the enchantment or artifact package you built around is never a topdeck away.

