Swiftgear Drake
Colorless graveyard hate that also happens to fly and attack the turn it lands. The five-mana price buys a body that blocks fliers and a single disruption trigger: one card from any graveyard goes to the bottom of its library, not exile, so a recursion engine can theoretically draw back into it later. That distinction matters. The card is a speed bump against reanimation and flashback rather than a permanent answer, and the "up to one" wording means it whiffs harmlessly into an empty graveyard instead of fizzling. What makes it worth a slot is the colorlessness: a deck with no access to Rest in Peace effects or Bojuka Bog can still run graveyard interaction stapled to a creature that pressures the opponent's life total while it does. The haste is the tell for how it was built: the design wants the drake pulling double duty, disrupting on entry and immediately advancing a clock, so the interaction never costs you tempo the way a dedicated hate piece does. It is the workmanlike middle of a spectrum that runs from targeted Nihil Spellbomb effects on one end to sweeping graveyard exile on the other, trading the thoroughness of exile for a warm body and evasion.
