Wary Okapi
Vigilance on a green three-drop reads as a design instruction: this body is meant to do both jobs on the same turn. Three power presses forward while the keyword holds the back row, so the attack that gets damage in does not also open a lane for a counter-swing. That is the entire strategic axis of the card, and it is the right one for a color that wants to be ahead on the ground without conceding the crackback that ground offense usually invites. The two toughness is the leash: it dies to nearly anything aimed at it, which means the card earns its keep through the timing advantage of attacking-and-blocking rather than through any durability. There is no second mode here, no enter-the-battlefield trigger, no tribe worth leaning on: an Antelope is not a payoff. What it is, honestly, is baseline green beef with one keyword doing the differentiating work, the kind of clean two-way attacker that a board-based aggressive plan stands on while the higher-rarity cards carry the game's swings. The vigilance is what nudges it a half-step above a vanilla 3/2, and it is the only thing about the card doing that lifting.
