Jeweled Bird
Few cards wear their era as plainly as this one. Ante was Magic's original wager mechanic: before each game, both players exiled the top card of their library, and the winner kept the loser's. The format died fast (collectors hated losing their cards, tournaments banned the rule, and the entire mechanic was retired from the rules), but a handful of Alpha and Arabian Nights cards were built to manipulate the stake itself, and this is the cleverest of them. The tap ability is a structural escape hatch: you ante the bird (a cheap, intentionally worthless trinket), recover every other card you would have lost from the ante zone into your graveyard, and replace the activation with a fresh card. It is, in effect, an ante-laundering machine, designed to let a player participate in an ante game while risking nothing of real value. The Reserved List and the DCI's banning of ante cards in every sanctioned format have left it as a curiosity rather than a playable card; it carries a permanent disclaimer in its own rules text, instructing players to remove it from their deck if ante is not in play. What makes it worth lingering on is the design honesty: rather than pretend ante was a balanced subgame, Wizards printed a card whose entire purpose was to opt out of it, and then quietly stopped printing the category altogether.



