Winged Words
Divination has always been the honest baseline for blue card advantage: three mana, draw two, no strings. The design here hands that effect a discount, but only to a deck already committed to the air. Control a flying creature and the price drops to two mana, matching Anticipate's tempo while netting a full extra card. The conditional cost is quiet gatekeeping: pure draw-go control decks that hold up counters rarely field a flyer on their own turn, so they pay full retail, while an aggressive shell running evasive threats gets the reward it was built to earn. Sorcery speed keeps it out of the reactive slot where cheap card draw becomes oppressive, and the flying requirement steers the card toward the archetype where refueling matters most: the deck that has already spent its early turns deploying pressure and now needs gas to close. What makes this a subtler lever than a flat cost reduction is that it rewards a specific board state rather than a specific decklist. The rate is unremarkable when you pay three; it becomes genuinely efficient the moment your team is airborne, and the card is content to be either depending on how the game has developed.




