Rebound applies as a replacement effect. If the spell would go to its owner's graveyard as it finishes resolving, it doesn't. Instead, it's exiled. The rest of the rebound effect then applies to it. If the spell would never go to the graveyard as it finishes resolving (because, for example, it exiles itself, it goes somewhere else, or it gets countered), then the replacement effect won't apply and you won't get to rebound the spell.
January 18, 2016
7:04 p.m.
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Epochalyptik says... Accepted answer #1
No.
Rebound applies as a replacement effect. If the spell would go to its owner's graveyard as it finishes resolving, it doesn't. Instead, it's exiled. The rest of the rebound effect then applies to it. If the spell would never go to the graveyard as it finishes resolving (because, for example, it exiles itself, it goes somewhere else, or it gets countered), then the replacement effect won't apply and you won't get to rebound the spell.
January 18, 2016 7:04 p.m.