Doomskar Titan
Hardcast, this is a slow overrun bolted onto a middling 4/4 body, arriving a turn too late to matter against a board that has already been built. The value lives entirely in the foretell math, though the math is a tax, not a discount: to exile it face down, then
to cast it later, seven mana across two turns rather than the six a hardcast would cost. What you buy for that extra mana is timing and secrecy. Splitting the bill lets a wide, already-developed board swing with +1/+0 and haste on a turn when the payoff is cheaper than the whole card, and the face-down exile doubles as information denial: the opponent sees a foretold card but cannot know which one, so the alpha strike lands without the telegraph a six-drop from hand would give. The haste clause closes the loop, and the timing detail matters: the trigger snapshots the creatures you control at resolution, so anything summoned earlier in the turn (or the Titan itself) can attack immediately rather than sit out with summoning sickness. That converts a board assembled the turn before, or a fresh dump of creatures cast ahead of the Titan, into an unannounced swing rather than a stalled anthem. It is a finisher for a deck that floods the battlefield early and cashes out late, paying more total mana to make the payoff turn arrive without warning.
