Field-Tested Frying Pan
Equipment normally arrives inert, a mana investment waiting on a body and a second equip cost before it does anything. This one shows up already worn: it enters, spins off a Food, then manufactures its own 1/1 Halfling wielder and buckles onto it in the same resolution. That self-attach clause is the quiet load-bearing piece, converting a three-mana artifact into an immediate two-token board with a scaling trigger stapled on. The rider is where the payoff lives, and its shape is exact: the buff is temporary, sized to the precise amount of life gained, and gated on gaining life at all. That last constraint is what keeps the token from being a plain beater. In a shell that gains nothing, the equipped Halfling is a 1/1 with dormant text; in a deck built to gain life in chunks, each gain event becomes a combat swing whose ceiling scales with lifelink attacks and stacked incidental-gain triggers. The Food it leaves behind is a one-time contribution rather than an engine: it costs mana and a tap to crack, but that first three-life gain feeds the very trigger the Equipment powers, so the setup and the payoff share a card. The recurring lifegain, though, has to come from elsewhere. It reads like kitchen-flavor fluff, yet structurally it is a lifegain-matters build-around that solves most of its own board presence: creature, Equipment, and a stored source of life all delivered in a single stack resolution, with the trigger left waiting for the deck to feed it.


