Wyleth, Soul of Steel
The Boros Voltron commander that finally answered the color pair's oldest problem: how to keep drawing while you dump everything into one attacker. Red-white aura and equipment decks had always run out of gas, forced to reload cards onto a creature that a single removal spell reset to zero. This design pays that risk back in raw refills: every Aura and Equipment strapped on turns each attack into a fistful of new cards, so the board that looks over-committed is also the board that never stops finding more threats. The trample is not incidental. It makes the same suited-up body that draws the cards also punch through chump blockers, closing the loop between the offense and the card advantage. The 2/2 frame is where the tension lives: unarmed, this is a bear that draws nothing, and the payoff depends on front-loading enough cheap auras and equipment to make the attack trigger matter before it gets there. That fragility is the cost of the engine. Where earlier Boros aggression leaned on wide boards or burn to grind through a stall, this leans on a single overloaded creature and dares the table to answer it before the draws bury them, a synthesis of the Voltron shell's all-in commitment with a card engine that keeps the all-in from being a one-way bet.
