Sky Hussar
Two abilities sit on this 4/3 flyer that point in opposite directions, and the trick is that they never touch. The enters-the-battlefield untap is the eye-catching half: it refreshes every creature you control, not just itself, so attackers from the previous turn snap back to block and any tapper or mana creature on board gets a second use the moment this lands. That is a one-time reset, fired once when the card resolves, and it is gone for good after that. Forecast is the other half, and it lives entirely in the hand. From upkeep you can reveal the card without casting it and tap two of your untapped white or blue creatures on the battlefield to draw, turning a wide board into a steady trickle of cards while you hold up your mana. The two halves sit at different points in the turn: Forecast fires from hand during your upkeep, and the untap only happens once you cast it and it enters, so a single copy can Forecast one upkeep and still be cast later for the untap. That fork is the real design statement. Most Forecast cards were pure hand-reveal engines for blue-white control shells, content to do something on each upkeep while the deck did nothing else. This one bundles that engine with a deploy-it-and-attack flyer, asking you to decide, every turn, whether the body or the draw engine does more for you right now.




