Tower of Murmurs
Twelve mana for eight cards in the bin: that is the price tag, and it tells you exactly what this artifact was built to be. Not a deck, not a clock, but a piece of early-era backdrop where mill was a flavor curiosity rather than a viable strategy. The math never works as a primary plan: eight cards a turn for eight mana plus the four to cast means a single activation costs more than most early decks could muster, and even uninterrupted it takes several turns to grind through a sixty-card library. What it represents is the era's idea of an artifact "engine" before engines had to be efficient: a colorless mill outlet anyone could run, asking only for mana you would have to flood to spend. The design tension it sits inside is real, though. Make a recurring mill source cheap and you risk it becoming a combo enabler; make it this expensive and it becomes a museum piece. This card chose the museum, and that prohibitive eight-mana toll is the wall that keeps it there. It endures as a reference point for how far colorless self-contained mill has come: every later outlet that earned constructed play did so by undercutting numbers like these.

