Whirlwind of Thought
The Jeskai colors are the natural home for a spell-density deck, but they had never quite been handed a payoff that turned every burn spell, every cantrip, every removal instant into a card that replaces itself. That is the job here: to reward a deck built almost entirely out of noncreature spells by paying a card for each one you cast. The trigger fires on the cast, not on resolution, so a countered spell still refunds you the card; the fizzled target, the fogged attack, the ping that misses all still draw. Where earlier spell-count engines like Niv-Mizzet, Parun wear a creature body vulnerable to a single removal spell, this one hides in the enchantment slot, harder to answer and free to keep firing across turns. The tension the design accepts is that it does nothing the turn it lands: no immediate board impact, no defensive value, just a promise that pays off only if the rest of the deck feeds it. That is the discipline in it. A pile of creatures makes the card blank; a shell of cheap interaction and cantrips makes it an engine that refuses to run out of gas, each spell drawing the next.








