TCG Playability
Enchantment
Landfall — Whenever a land you control enters, create a 2/2 colorless Robot artifact creature token. Warp {1}{G} (You may cast this card from your hand for its warp cost. Exile this enchantment at the beginning of the next end step, then you may cast it from exile on a later turn.)
A harmonious production for a better world.
Eusocial Engineering represents an exciting crossroads of green's traditional land-based strategy and artifact synergy, making it a compelling addition to any deck built around landfall mechanics or token generation. At five mana, this enchantment transforms every land drop into a 2/2 Robot creature, providing consistent board presence that scales with your deck's ability to play lands. The real strategic depth emerges from its warp mechanic, which allows you to cast it for just one green mana from your hand, exile it at end of turn, and then recast it from exile during subsequent turns. This flexibility means you can deploy it as an early threat when you don't have better plays, then continue generating tokens throughout the game by recasting it repeatedly, essentially turning your mana investment into an ongoing token factory. Players interested in landfall-focused strategies should immediately consider this card for decks featuring fetchlands, ramp spells, or other land tutors that enable consistent land drops. The combination of token generation and the warp mechanic makes it particularly strong in Commander, where the extended game length allows you to maximize repeated casting and exploit landfall triggers across multiple turns. It fits beautifully into green-based ramp strategies, artifact-heavy decks that care about creature tokens, and any shell running cards like Omnath or The Locust God. With its wide legality across Standard, Pioneer, Modern, Commander, and numerous other formats, Eusocial Engineering offers versatility for players looking to strengthen their creature-focused green strategies or build entirely new landfall-themed decks around consistent token production.
Illustrated by Francisco Badilla