Liberating Combustion
Six damage for five mana is a poor spot-removal rate on its own, but the removal is only the price of admission for the second sentence: a burn spell built as a tutor with a kill stapled to it. That second clause hunts a single named planeswalker, Chandra, Pyrogenius, out of your library or graveyard, a deliberately narrow pairing meant to let a deck reliably draw into its centerpiece while still affecting the board the turn it resolves. This sits with the "cast a spell, then fetch the marquee card" designs that ship alongside flagship planeswalkers, where the effect half exists mostly to justify running a tutor for the bomb. The graveyard search is the quietly useful half: a copy that gets discarded or countered isn't dead, since the spell can pull it back on the way to the table. But the tutor is locked to exactly one card by name, so it's a closed loop rather than a toolbox: the search can never find a second option or scale into anything else. What you're left with is two halves competing for the same slot, a chunk of damage that wants to cost less and a search that wants to find more than one thing, and it only clicks in the specific pairing it was built around. Away from that centerpiece, the removal is expensive and the second sentence is inert.
