Ardent Plea
The cleanest cascade enabler the combo decks ever got: a three-mana enchantment whose entire purpose is to trigger the keyword once and then sit on the battlefield, inert, its job already done. Cascade looks for the first nonland card with a lower mana value than the spell you cast, and at mana value three the band you hit is narrow and dependable: most of what lives at two or below is the payoff a combo deck wanted to flip into. That precision is the appeal. Where a creature with cascade has to survive a turn to matter again and a sorcery with cascade leaves nothing behind, an enchantment commits a permanent that asks nothing of the board afterward and stays put as a passive piece if the engine stalls. The exalted clause is almost vestigial by comparison, a flavor nod to the lone-attacker theme that surrounded this kind of card, relevant only to a build that has wandered far from the cascade plan. The interaction worth understanding is the timing one: casting this puts it on the stack, and the cascade trigger goes on top of it, so even if an opponent counters the enchantment in response, the free spell underneath is already locked in and will still resolve. Strip away the exalted text and what remains is a colored, permanent cascade trigger sitting exactly at three: the most reliable shape that mechanic has ever come in.

