TCG Playability
Artifact — Food
When this artifact enters and when you sacrifice it, create a 1/1 white Rabbit creature token and scry 1. (Look at the top card of your library. You may put that card on the bottom.) {2}, {T}, Sacrifice this artifact: You gain 3 life.
"Secret ingredient? What do you think?" —Ms. Bumbleflower
Carrot Cake from the Bloomburrow set represents an elegant example of utility artifact design that appeals to both casual and competitive players across multiple formats. This one-white-mana Food artifact offers deceptively flexible utility through its layered effects: it creates a 1/1 white Rabbit token and scries 1 when it enters the battlefield, then triggers those same effects again when sacrificed. This dual trigger creates immediate tempo advantage while providing card selection, making it particularly valuable in decks that struggle with mana consistency or need early creatures. The sacrifice outlet provides an additional mode, allowing players to gain 3 life for two generic mana and a tap, transforming excess copies into incremental life gain and creating a secondary utility function when the scry effect becomes less relevant. The card fits seamlessly into white-based strategies across numerous formats, from token-focused decks that maximize creature synergies to creature-light control shells that benefit from the scry and life gain modes. In Standard and Historic formats, it serves as a efficient early play that generates consistent value while supporting sacrifice themes and creature-heavy strategies. Its extreme format legality across Standard through Vintage and Commander formats means players can incorporate it into countless deck archetypes. Food synergy decks, white weenie strategies, and decks requiring consistent card selection all benefit from Carrot Cake's efficient mana cost and multiple modes, making it an excellent pickup for players seeking affordable utility.
Illustrated by Forrest Imel