Boros Guildgate
The price of two-color fixing in the cheapest possible package: a tapped-land tax paid once, in exchange for a source that never costs life and never gets shut off. The Guildgate cycle codified a design baseline that the dual-land conversation has circled ever since, sitting at the floor where reliability is total and tempo is the only sacrifice. The entering-tapped clause is the whole cost structure: there is no shock-land choice to make, no basic-land-type check to satisfy, no fetchability, just the guaranteed turn of lag. That tradeoff defines the card's place against every faster Boros dual that asks you to pay life or own the right basics to untap it. The Gate type matters more than the rate suggests, because a small but persistent class of cards reads the word "Gate" off the type line, turning what looks like a colorless commodity into a deliberate build-around payoff. Stripped of that synergy, this is fixing at its most honest: it does exactly one thing, asks for one turn of patience, and never lies to you about which colors it makes.


















