Nyxbloom Ancient
Green's mana amplifiers have always stopped one increment short of breaking: Mana Reflection doubles what your lands and dorks produce, Vernal Bloom and Heartbeat of Spring pour extra out of specific sources. Tripling is a different order of math. A single tapped Forest becomes three; a Gaea's Cradle over a wide board becomes an obscene pile; any mana rock, any land you were going to tap anyway suddenly funds a turn that reads like a misprint. The card does not build a combo so much as inflate whatever engine you already have, which is why it lives most naturally in decks already fixed on generating too much mana and only wanting more. The 5/5 trample body is almost incidental, the tax that keeps this from being a pure enchantment payoff: it commits to the board, threatens actual damage over the following turns, and dies to the same removal any seven-drop creature dies to, which is the leash holding the effect in check. Read the phrasing carefully. It triples the mana a permanent produces when you tap it, which sweeps in the mana rocks, the dorks, and the Treasure tokens you crack (a Treasure taps as part of its own sacrifice cost, so it counts). What falls outside its reach are the instant-speed rituals that produce mana without tapping a permanent at all. That is a narrow gap, but it is the difference between an extravagant ramp payoff and one that simply ends the game by resolving.






