Saw It Coming
The oldest tension in blue is the dead counterspell: draw it a turn too late and it rots in hand while the game passes you by. Foretell converts that liability into a resource, and the split is what makes it worth studying. Bank the on a quiet early turn, tuck the card away, and the counter fires later for only
, a discount that would be genuinely dangerous if it came free. The tax paid up front is what buys the price cut, but the more valuable thing it buys is ambiguity: a hidden foretell card could be removal, a threat, or nothing at all, so the opponent has to respect the entire menu rather than a known Cancel. The two open lands look the same as any held-up counter, but the reason for them is hidden, and that uncertainty is the payload. The prepayment also does budgeting work most counters cannot: mana you had nothing to spend on an early turn becomes an answer you did not have to hold up on a later one, smoothing a curve that used to punish you for drawing your interaction too soon. For any deck with slack in its opening turns to prepay, it is a clean upgrade over the plain three-mana counterspell, turning blue's classic problem (dead cards in slow hands) into a resource-conversion trick that costs nothing but tempo you were not using anyway.

