Savvy Trader
The recursion clause is the ordinary half: green has clawed a single permanent back from the graveyard for decades, and this one-shot enter trigger exiles a permanent card and lets you play it later. The second sentence is the reason a 3/3 for four exists at all: a static discount on everything you cast from anywhere but your hand, which can fold the card it just exiled into the discount and keeps discounting long after that enter trigger has resolved. Flashback spells, foretold cards, and escape payments all shave a mana off. That turns a fair body into a cost-reducer for an entire subgame of casting-from-elsewhere effects, and the two abilities hand off cleanly: the enter trigger creates a single cast-from-exile object, then the static discount cheapens casting it, along with everything else your deck launches from outside hand. The reduction only bites when your playable objects live in the graveyard or in exile rather than in hand, which is the deckbuilding constraint that pays for stapling a persistent discount onto a creature that blocks and attacks on its own. Nothing about the rate is loud, and that restraint is the point: it rewards a shell already leaning on graveyard replay and alternative-zone casting rather than functioning as a standalone value creature.

