Sam's Desperate Rescue
Raise Dead has been reprinted a dozen ways across the game's history, and the effect never changes: pay a single black mana, pull a creature card back from the graveyard to hand, no bells attached. The template is deliberately floorless, a rate so old it barely registers as a card. What sets this iteration apart is the clause hanging off the bottom line, the tempting rider that turns the most vanilla recursion in black into a payoff enabler. A one-mana rebuy that also advances a separate track, ticking toward escalating benefits and naming a Ring-bearer among your creatures. The design move is elegant in its cynicism: take a card whose entire résumé reads "efficient but forgettable" and hand it a purpose divorced from the graveyard entirely. Because it costs so little, the recursion becomes almost incidental and the temptation becomes the real reason to run it: a spell you cast to move the Ring, which happens to buy back a body on the way through.

