Boltbender
Target-stealing effects usually announce themselves. Redirect, Misdirection, and Deflecting Swat are instants you either hold up visibly or cast off a card in hand, telegraphing the trick the moment you leave mana open. This buries the same effect inside a face-down morph shell, and the disguise packaging is the design's whole cleverness. Cast under Disguise, it presents as an anonymous 2/2 with ward: a body with no reason to draw interaction, waiting. The redirection fires only when the creature is turned face up, and it fires wide, letting you choose new targets for any number of other spells and abilities on the stack in one motion. That timing is the entire point. Because the flip happens at instant speed for its disguise cost, you sit on the card until an opponent commits a removal spell, a burn spell, or a stacked chain of combo triggers, then unbury it and rewrite every target at once. A burn spell aimed at your face gets pointed back at its caster; a tutored combo trigger targeting a rival gets aimed at the player who cast it. The ceiling scales with how much is on the stack, which makes this a punish card by construction: the more an opponent overloads the stack into your untapped mana, the more it costs them. What holds it in check is that it does nothing proactive. The redirection needs enemy targets already declared to steal, so the card is a trap that only springs on someone else's spell.

