Yotian Soldier
Vigilance on an artifact body was a structural statement, not a stat line. The early sets were building the vocabulary for artifacts as a distinct card type, and this Soldier was the load-bearing example of what that meant: a body that absorbed most early attackers without trading (a 1/4 holds the ground line against almost anything red and white could field) while still pressuring the opponent's life total at its leisure. The vigilance keyword did not exist by that name yet; the card spelled the ability out in full, and it would be years before the templating caught up to what this card was already doing. The toughness-over-power split is the design tell. Power one signals a creature that is not built to race; toughness four means it outlasts the era's typical aggressors. Pair that with an attack step that costs you nothing defensively, and you have a creature that grinds incremental damage while the actual win condition comes together elsewhere. The lineage runs through every artifact-creature defender Wizards has printed since: the idea that an artifact body can be a wall and a clock at once starts in cards like this, a common from a moment when the game was mostly trying to figure out what artifacts were for.








