Feather, Radiant Arbiter
The original Feather, the Redeemed built an archetype on recursion: cheap spells that target your own creatures come back to hand, so you cast Defiant Strike or Reckless Rage on Feather forever and grind an opponent out of resources. This version keeps the flavor of a spell-slinging Angel but rebuilds the payoff around fork-effects rather than persistence. The trigger fires when a noncreature spell targets only this Angel and lets you pay two mana per additional creature to copy that spell onto each of them, redirected. That reframes what a targeted trick is worth: a single Giant Growth aimed here becomes a multi-target growth spell across your board for a scaling tax, and a targeted removal-styled buff or protection spell fans out into a wave of copies. The design is deliberately narrow in one axis and wide in another. Narrow because the spell must target only Feather to arm the trigger, which rewards single-target cantrips and pump over splashy multi-target sorceries; wide because once armed, the number of copies is bounded only by your mana and how many legal targets sit on the table. It sits in the lineage of copy-and-redirect payoffs like Fork and Reverberate, but folded into a permanent that generates the effect off your own gameplan instead of reacting to a spell already on the stack. The lifelink and evasive body matter here: this is a creature meant to be buffed and swung, not merely a passive value engine.

