Armed with Proof
A Clue token has always been card advantage on layaway: an artifact you park on the battlefield and cash in when the game slows down. This rewrites what that token is. By retyping every Clue you control as Equipment with a flat power bump and a modest equip cost, it turns each one into a fork rather than a single-use draw spell. The two Clues it makes on entry are only the seed; the effect is retroactive and continuous, arming every Clue already sitting on your board and every one you generate afterward, so its value scales with any other investigate trigger or Clue-maker you have running. The elegant part is that the retyping is additive: a Clue becomes Equipment in addition to its artifact type, so it keeps its innate sacrifice ability. You are not trading the draw for the beatdown. A Clue bolted onto a creature is still a card you can crack later, which means an equipped attacker doubles as a mana-efficient way to hold the draw in reserve and swing for it in the same turn. That collapses a decision most Clue payoffs force you to make sequentially into one you get to make simultaneously. It is a rare piece of design that changes the identity of a resource rather than just producing more of it, and it rewards a board where evidence has been quietly stacking up unspent.

