Glorybringer

Oracle Text
Flying, haste
You may exert Glorybringer as it attacks. When you do, it deals 4 damage to target non-Dragon creature an opponent controls. (An exerted creature won't untap during your next untap step.)
Card Rulings
4/18/2017 You can’t exert a creature unless an effect allows you to do so. Similar effects that “tap and freeze” a creature (such as that of Decision Paralysis) don’t exert that creature.
4/18/2017 If an exerted creature is already untapped during your next untap step (most likely because it had vigilance or an effect untapped it), exert’s effect preventing it from untapping expires without having done anything.
4/18/2017 If you gain control of another player’s creature until end of turn and exert it, it will untap during that player’s untap step.
4/18/2017 If a creature has a targeted triggered ability that triggers when you exert it, you can exert it even if there isn’t a legal target for that triggered ability.
4/18/2017 All cards in the Amonkhet set that let you exert a creature let you do so as you declare it as an attacking creature, as do some of the cards in the Hour of Devastation set. You can’t do so later in combat, and creatures put onto the battlefield attacking can’t be exerted. Any abilities that trigger on exerting an attacking creature will resolve before blockers are declared.
For example, if an exerted creature requires you to not untap it during the untap step in order to remove the exerted condition, it would put a serious roadblock on any untap-shenanigans, particularly in blue. Or if it was worded so that the next untap is skipped rather than the next untap STEP, then untapping effects could be used to remove the exerted condition.
When your next untap step rolls around, if the creature you exerted is untapped, nothing happens and the exertion cost you nothing. Maybe you found a different way to untap it, or maybe you gave it vigilance. You are clever!
They also reference the mechanics article, where exert is read as:
Exert is an ability that appears on creatures. You make the decision whether or not to Exert the creature when you declare attackers. If you choose not to Exert the creature attacks as normal. If you do Exert, you get to use the Exert ability but the creature does not untap during your next untap step.
Seems pretty straightforward, not unlike how we're already pretty used to dealing with stuff like Liliana, The Last Hope -2/-1 effects.
I like the fact it sais non-dragon, otherwise you could get into a silly situation where you wait for eachother to play this.
Just a really solid card, cleaning up a gideon + token and getting a dragon that untaps for more sweetnes 2 turns from now is really good.