Elsewhere Flask
The cantrip is the polite fiction; the sacrifice is the reason this exists. For two mana you replace the artifact with a fresh card, then later cash it in to rewrite every land you control into a single basic type until end of turn. That second clause is the one builders care about, because collapsing your whole mana base into one type does more than smooth a color requirement. It changes how anything that reads land subtypes counts your board. A card like Blood Moon or a domain payoff suddenly sees a very different board once every land you control shares one type, because those effects count land subtypes on your side of the table. The same trick turns a deck full of typed payoffs into a deck where the type is whatever you declare on the turn you need it. The conversion stays a single decisive moment rather than a standing engine: the effect lasts only until end of turn, and the artifact is gone once you fire it, so you get one window, chosen deliberately. It asks almost nothing on the way in, and that low cost of entry is why it keeps surfacing in builds keyed to land typing: a nonthreatening artifact that cantrips on arrival and does its loudest work the turn it dies.



