Circle of Protection: Artifacts
The Circle of Protection cycle is one of Magic's oldest sideboard enchantments, a fossil of the era when Wizards expected players to bring narrow, color-pie hate cards to answer specific threats. This particular member is the odd one out: instead of pointing at a color, it points at a card type, and that asymmetry tells you exactly what Antiquities was about. The set's artifacts (Juggernaut, Su-Chi, the Mishra's Factory beatdown plan) were the dominant damage sources of their moment, and white's traditional prevention toolbox needed a piece that could answer them without rewriting the template. So the Circle stayed the Circle: same two-mana enchantment frame, same activated prevention shield, same one-source-at-a-time discipline that keeps it from being a true lock. The activation cost is the structural pressure valve. Two mana per prevented source means a wide artifact board (or a single recurring hitter like Mishra's Factory attacking every turn) eventually taxes you out, and the ability only addresses damage to you, leaving your creatures and planeswalkers exposed. The card is a museum piece now, interesting less for what it does than for what it documents: a design philosophy where sideboards were built from color-pie primitives, and where a format warped enough by brown threats earned its own white enchantment to answer them.






