Akroan Conscriptor
Heroic usually asks a creature to survive the spell you aim at it and pockets a small reward for doing so: a counter, a token, a temporary buff to the creature itself. This one turns that relationship inside out. The spell you cast never really cares about the 3/2 body it targets; it is just the fuse for a Threaten effect that untaps another target creature, hands it to you with haste, and lets it swing that turn. The redirection is both the appeal and the catch. Because the trigger fires on casting a targeting spell, every activation costs you a real card, and the borrowed creature goes home at end of turn, so the design leans hard on a sacrifice payoff: steal the threat, attack with it, then eat it before it reverts. That pushes the deckbuilding sideways. Instead of the combat-trick cantrips and pump spells the rest of the heroic suite wants for value, this one wants the cheapest expendable targeted spells you can find, cast solely to keep the engine firing. It is the heroic creature that cares least about its own survival and most about what sits across the table: the trick lands on the opponent, not on the creature you are pointing the spell at. That inversion makes it the odd member of the cycle, a combo enabler wearing a combat-trick's clothing.
