Radiant Lotus
The genius of this design is the multiplier baked into the sacrifice clause: three mana per artifact, not the one-to-one refund most sacrifice rituals trade in. That ratio is what elevates it above the crowd of cash-in-a-permanent artifacts; where they hand you back roughly what you fed them, this one triples whatever board you've assembled and gives the pile to any player you choose. The "target player" wording is the wrinkle worth dwelling on, because the payoff need not come home to you: the mana can go to a partner, a monarch you're feeding, or into whatever politics a multiplayer table generates. Six mana up front is the ballast against a turn-one explosion, and the tap symbol means it fires once per turn cycle unless you're untapping it, so the ceiling is gated by how many artifacts you can afford to feed it. It rewards a battlefield already crowded with cheap or free artifacts, the same fuel that Treasure tokens, Clue tokens, and their kin were printed to supply. What it converts is not just mana but tempo: a slow accumulation of trinkets collapsed into a single burst large enough to hard-cast something the rest of the table can't answer. The name promises a flowering, and the ability delivers exactly that shape: dormant while you build, then a sudden bloom of colored mana proportional to everything you've been holding.






