Secrets of the Key
The card is built around an asymmetry between its two casts. From hand, one blue mana buys a single Clue: a card drawn later, on installment, once you spend the two mana and the sacrifice to crack it. That is deliberately unremarkable, a slow trickle rather than a cantrip. The flashback cast is where the doubling clause turns an ordinary one-for-one into a staggered value engine: recast from the graveyard, the spell makes two Clues instead of one. The same card, spent twice, produces three Clues and eventually three cards, with every payment spread across turns rather than committed up front. It trades tempo for total volume, asking you to bank the draws and pay for them later. Flashback's exile-on-resolution clause is the ceiling here: you get exactly one bonus cast, so the doubling never spirals into anything unbounded. It is a small, disciplined piece of blue card advantage for decks content to mine their own graveyard for extra cards and settle their debts in slow motion.

