Wizened Snitches
Most cards that grant top-of-library visibility hand it to you alone, a private read on your next draw to feed scry and topdeck manipulation. The wrinkle here is the word players: the reveal is symmetric, exposing every library at the table, including the opponents who never asked for it. That turns a small evasive flier into a strange shared-information machine, and the strategic question it poses is who actually profits from the lights being on. The body is built for the long game: a 1/3 with flying chips in for one a turn and survives most of what an aggressor throws at it, signaling that this card was never meant to race. It was meant to sit on the board and quietly rewrite the information economy, paying off a deck already built to act on what it sees (instant-speed answers, counters held for a known threat) while leaking the same data to anyone paying attention. As pure design it sits in an early line of symmetric-knowledge cards that treat hidden information as a resource to be unlocked rather than hoarded, a more committal cousin to the one-sided peeks on either side of it. The friction is real and the card is honest about it: you are paying four mana and a card slot to make the game legible for everyone, and trusting that legibility helps your plan more than theirs.
