This card is capable of some incredible feats, particularly against Eater decks. It is immune to parasite, Forked, and is sufficient annoying to break or run through that neither is really ideal. To illustrate the point:

In a recent NEXT game, I had found and installed all 3 Architects. One was on R&D, one on Archives, one on a remote that I was using to keep assets up vs Eater Keyhole. He had keyholed out two of my Jacksons sadly, but I simply Interns'd one back behind the remote Architect. He ran it, let it fire in order to trash it, and I simply installed the other Jackson in the trash into a new remote (and got to build my R&D from the top 5 for free). He runs to trash that one too, so I just trigger it and save an agenda and put the other jackson back in the deck. Eventually he realizes I'm almost set up to score out very safely, and goes for an Amped Up Wanton for his final play. Three agendas in my hand go in the trash, and I realize I should have kept the Jackson in the trash to recur rather than shuffle it back in. He runs archives, letting the Arch fire. I realize there's two jacksons in the deck, 15 cards left, not horrible odds, and it's there! Install it, save my agendas, recur an Adonis in the process, and laugh all the way to the bank.

This card is nuts.

His mistake was letting it fire at all, especially when he never had to. —
Right now the threat of an Architect is more valuable than an actual Architect. At 4 to rez and 2 to break with Mimic, it's a pretty terrible taxer for the world's most common Killer. It's only useful against an Eater deck if the deck can ONLY bypass sentries by killing them (via cutlery or parasites). If they have actual breakers (they should), or they're running Crescentus, Architect loses all of its value except as a very early game facecheck threat. —
Patch does wonders for Architect. —
If he had used Eater to stop Architect from firing the run wouldn't of been worth making in the first place as it would of prevented him from accessing Jackson —

An interesting backup plan for glacier-ey decks utilizing the HB 3/2 agendas. You can throw it down in your scoring server, advance once (or ideally twice), and then either the runner runs through your scoring server (which ideally would open up a real scoring window by draining their resources), or you get a free and safe fast-advance turn, and potentially two if it lives. Can create useful win-win situations without dropping the influence for SanSans.

Now the downside: you probably are just running Biotics. It does the same thing, usually cheaper and safer. I could see a deck that is utilizing The Root, or cards that make trashing assets far more hazardous, perhaps making this a more friendly option. But right now it's hard to imagine a time you'd prefer to have this over a Biotic.

As someone who played the very lopsided Cerebral Imaging match-up last week, I think "Edward Kim" is such an occasion. (Don't think it's worth the deck space for that addition, but worth noting.) —