Crown of Convergence
Most reveal effects pay off once: a tutor smooths a single draw, a scry trades a card seen for a card buried. This artifact bets on permanence instead, turning your perpetually-visible next card into a rolling anthem keyed to whatever color it happens to share with your board. The tension lands the instant you parse it: an anthem that only fires while your library cooperates is no anthem at all, so the ability exists to manufacture that cooperation, paying mana to bottom an unhelpful card and dig toward a creature in your colors. That activated cost is also the honest tax: this is no static team buff, since you spend mana every turn the reveal coughs up a land or an off-color spell. What it actually rewards is a creature base built almost entirely in one or two shared colors, where the live rate climbs and the bottoming ability shifts from constant toll to cheap smoothing engine. The fixed +1/+1 (no scaling, no stacking, no reward for revealing a second creature) keeps the ceiling deliberately low, so the card reads less like a payoff and more like a thought experiment: can a known next draw be a resource a battlefield cares about? The answer it arrives at is conditional, fragile, and entirely contingent on how monochromatic you are willing to make your deck.
