Teferi's Moat
Naming a color and walling out everything that wears it: this is the rare defensive enchantment that answers an entire deck at once rather than a single threat. Against a mono-colored aggressive board, the chosen-color creatures simply have nowhere to point, and the wall holds without further attention. The fliers clause is the leak left in on purpose, the seam that keeps the card from being an absolute lock and rewards the attacker who diversified above the ground. The design holds up because it costs nothing to maintain and demands no further investment once it resolves: no upkeep, no counters, no activation. It sits on the battlefield and quietly deletes one line of attack. The cost is paid in flexibility. You commit to a single color as it enters, with no way to repoint it afterward, so a board that splits its threats across two or three colors leaves the wall covering only a fraction of what is coming, and any chosen-color attacker with flying slips straight past regardless. At five mana the choice is rarely a blind one; you cast this with the opponent's lands and creatures already on the table, so you usually know exactly which color is hurting you. The riddle is not what to name but what the card cannot stop once you have named it: a single color stitched shut, every other angle still open, which is why it has lived as a measured answer to mono-colored aggression rather than a wall you can run against any board.

