Peach Garden Oath
Lifegain that scales with your own board is a strange thing to bottle into a one-mana sorcery, because the decks that field enough creatures to make it worth casting are rarely the decks that needed the life to begin with. That tension defines the card: a packed go-wide board returns a fat life total, but a packed go-wide board is usually winning anyway, while a control deck that genuinely wants the buffer has nothing on the battlefield to convert. The result is a spell whose ceiling and floor are pinned to the same board state from opposite directions, paying out most when the payout matters least. The flavor reaches for the oath of brotherhood from Romance of the Three Kingdoms, the founding pact of Liu Bei, Guan Yu, and Zhang Fei sworn in the peach orchard, and the mechanic gestures at the idea: your fellowship sustains you, more allies mean more strength. As a piece of design it sits in the small family of conditional-quantity lifegain spells that read better in a vacuum than they play in practice, the white cousin of effects that ask you to already be ahead before they pay out. It is honest about what it is, and what it is not: a number that rises with a board you have already committed, not a stabilizer that arrives when the board is empty and the life total is the problem.



