Mirrormade
For years the clone effect that named a permanent type meant Copy Artifact, then Copy Enchantment claimed the field's other classic noun. This card folds both duties into one shell, mirroring any artifact or enchantment on the battlefield. Historically, clones that pointed at a single permanent class felt like conditional answers: playable only when you already knew the table was stocked with the right nouns. Widening the pool to every artifact and every enchantment changes the arithmetic, since the card is live against a broader board, and the deckbuilding cost of running it drops accordingly. What stays constant is the limit every copy-a-permanent enchantment carries: it can only mirror what already exists, so it reads the board rather than dictating it, reactive by nature. There is no cost reduction, no legend-swapping clause, none of the extra text later clone designs bolt on; the value ceiling is entirely a function of what has been built around it. That makes it a card that scales with the power level in play: modest when the best target is a Signet or a Sol Ring, backbreaking when the strongest artifact or enchantment on the battlefield is a game-ending engine you can suddenly have twice.




