Wind Drake
When Wizards needs to know what a plain flier ought to cost, the math runs through this body: three mana, a 2/2, wings, no other text. The vocabulary of creature evaluation grew up around it. A flier that beats this rate without a downside (Snapping Drake's extra power for a mana, or a winged 2/1 a turn earlier) reads as a deliberate push; one that falls short is paying for some other line it does not have. That makes the card less a playable than a unit of measurement, the blue counterpart to the work Hill Giant once did for vanilla ground beaters. Its lineage in the simplest creatures Wizards has ever assembled is the tell: a flier whose entire behavior the rules already explain needs no further text, which is precisely the point. It has been reprinted across decades not because anyone wanted another copy but because beginner products and low-complexity core sets keep reaching for the same honest, legible silhouette. What earns it a page is that legibility: this is the yardstick every other flier gets held against.

















