Treetop Bracers
The evasion-aura at its most stripped down: a small stat bump welded to a quasi-unblockable clause, where the "except by creatures with flying" carve-out is the entire design tension. Ground creatures can't stop it, but the aura quietly cedes the air to anyone holding a flier, which makes it a green tool that pushes through the colors green typically struggles to race rather than a true menace effect. The trade-up green pays for this is real: every aura is card disadvantage waiting to happen, and a single removal spell on the enchanted creature two-for-ones you. That fragility caps the rate, and it's why this style of effect lives almost entirely in aggressive shells that want their threat connecting now rather than holding it back as a long-term investment. The flying exception also roots the card in an era when ground stalls were the default board state of green decks, and giving a fattened beater a clear lane mattered more than dodging spot removal. It's the honest, unglamorous version of the unblockable aura: enough evasion to matter against an opposing wall, enough vulnerability that you're never quite comfortable casting it, and a flavor-appropriate concession to the one thing green was never meant to beat in the air.




