Kindle
A burn spell that scales with its own redundancy: each copy in the graveyard feeds the next, so the fourth Kindle off the top reads as five damage instead of two. The design idea is that a deck running the full set turns a mediocre rate into a snowballing one, and because the count reads every graveyard, both players' spent copies stoke the fire. That last clause is the wrinkle that makes the card more than a Johnny novelty: in a mirror, the spells compound across the table, so the player who fires last gets the largest number. The friction holding it in check is obvious once you see it: the first copy is a strictly worse Shock variant, and the payoff only arrives if you survive long enough to draw into the back half of your Kindles. It rewards a kind of patient sequencing that runs against the impatience of the color it lives in. Tempest sat at the front of a design era fond of cards that referenced themselves by name, and Kindle is the tidiest expression of that gimmick: a removal spell whose ceiling is written entirely in how many of itself you are willing to play.



