Wojek Apothecary
Tap this Cleric and the single point of damage you prevent does not stay put: it ripples outward to every creature on the table painted the same color as your target. That spread is the whole reason the card exists, the most literal demonstration of how a single-target prevention turns into a board-wide one. Aim it at a white creature when your side is monochromatic and the entire team shrugs off a point apiece, a fog-lite against a burn turn or a clean reset of combat math. Aim it at a multicolored creature and the shield widens to cover two color buckets at once. The leash is that the effect never asks who controls anything: point at an enemy white attacker and you protect it alongside everything else white in play, your own included. So the reach and the limitation are the same rule, and the cleanest line is always your own creatures while the opponent's board sits in a different bucket. The 1/1 body is beside the point; this is a repeatable prevention engine that refreshes each untap step, gated entirely by a color match. It belongs to a short-lived design era when shared color was treated as a board-state relevance test, the same structural job that later designs would hand to shared creature type instead: relevance keyed to what is on the battlefield rather than to what a player paid to build.

