Stingcaster Mage
Flashback has always been a graveyard-native keyword: the exile clause is printed on the card itself, and you pay it whenever the timing suits you. This body flips that arrangement, granting flashback to an instant or sorcery already in your graveyard, but only until end of turn, and only at the spell's original mana cost. The result is a recursion effect that trades permanence for tempo. There is no discount, so the reused spell is castable again this turn, but the window slams shut when your turn does. Haste on a two-drop is the tell about how the card wants to be played: it comes down and swings the same turn it hands you back a burn spell or a cantrip, folding a body and a second use of your best instant or sorcery into one attack step. The constraint that keeps this from being a pure value engine is the same-turn deadline. You cannot bank the flashback for a later crisis; you have to have the mana, the target, and the reason all lined up the moment it enters. That makes it a burst card rather than an attrition one, the kind of recursion that rewards a hand already primed to spend, not one hoarding options. It sits in a long line of red creatures that turn cheap spells into repeatable resources, but where most of those charge you a premium, this one just rents the graveyard for a single turn.

