When Will You Learn?
The tension baked into this scheme is that it hands the archenemy a windfall built entirely out of the opponents' cards, then dares them to have loaded their decks with something worth stealing. Each opponent exiles a single card, and the archenemy may cast any spells from among those cards for free: a communal, off-the-top Hunted variant where the payoff is dictated by the players sitting across the table rather than anything in the archenemy's own list. That makes it one of the more volatile schemes in the multiplayer-boss format, because the ceiling scales with the pod. A table of tuned, expensive decks turns the top card of each library into a potential free bomb; a table of low-curve aggro leaves the archenemy casting a Llanowar Elves for nothing. It is a design that leans hard into the theater of the Archenemy experience: the flip is a moment of collective dread, everyone bracing to see what the game just decided to donate. The scoped-down cost (a single card each) keeps it from being an outright blowout while preserving the swing potential, and the "you may" phrasing means the archenemy is never forced to cast something inconvenient, only offered the pick of the litter.

