Obsessive Search
Hardcast for , this draws a card with no scry or upside attached, a rate that justifies nothing on its own. The whole design lives in the madness clause: discard it to a looter, to a hand-size cleanup step, to any effect that asks you to ditch a card, and you replay it from exile for
, converting a discard cost into a draw. Where most madness cards turn the discard into a discount on something you genuinely wanted to cast, this one is closer to pure card-flow plumbing: it turns a discard outlet into a draw engine, so a deck that loots and rummages stops paying in raw cards to dig. What madness adds here is not instant speed (the card is already an instant) but a second window. The trigger fires off the discard itself, on either player's turn, so a card thrown away to a loot effect returns as a draw instead of sinking into the graveyard. The catch the design quietly imposes is that you still owe
at the moment of discard: the madness cast happens right then, so you need the mana untapped when the loot resolves, not at your draw step. It is madness working as enabler rather than payoff, a spell whose printed function exists mainly so something else in the deck can throw cards away without losing them.


