Dream Chisel
Morph priced its trick at three mana flat: every face-down creature deploys for the same no matter what waits under the card. This artifact attacks that fixed number directly, shaving every face-down spell you cast down to
. The appeal is volume rather than acceleration. A morph deck wanted to land several face-down bodies over the course of a game, and the discount stacks across all of them, so the saving compounds with your commitment to the mechanic: a turn that previously fit one face-down threat now fits two, and a long game where you flip three or four morphs has quietly handed back three or four mana. That reward only pays off when morph is the spine of the list, not when a single creature with a good flip is splashed in. The trouble is that one saved mana sits just shy of the threshold where a discount snowballs into a real tempo break, and morph has rarely carried the payoff density to justify a two-mana artifact that contributes nothing until a face-down creature follows it. Its ceiling is entirely hostage to how many morphs share the deck with it: where that density is high it functions as a genuine cost-reduction engine, and everywhere else it is an enabler still waiting for an archetype to earn its slot.
