Leyline Invocation
The Fractal it makes is a mirror of your development: whatever you've built up in lands gets stamped straight onto a single creature's power and toughness. That conversion sets it apart from the usual green fatty, which pays for a fixed body. This one instead pays for the act of counting, so a green deck already flooding on lands turns dead resources into a threat that scales with the game it has been losing to. The body arrives as a 0/0 first and only survives because the counters are added during the same resolution, before state-based actions are ever checked, so it never touches the graveyard as a state-based casualty. That single-token payload is also its exposure: everything rides on one creature, and one removal spell erases the entire investment with no board left behind. What keeps the design honest is the sorcery timing and the ceiling built into your own manabase. You cannot flash it in as a combat surprise, and the token is only ever as large as the lands you have actually assembled, so the payoff tracks a resource you are already spending the game accumulating rather than a combo you assemble to spike it. It is the ramp deck's release valve: a way to spend a glut of lands on a single decisive swing, priced so the reward is real but the eggs sit in one very fragile basket.
