Cabaretti Courtyard
The evolving-wilds template narrowed to a single color triangle: instead of any basic land type, the search here is locked to Mountain, Forest, and Plains, the Naya shard's three colors. That restriction is the entire logic of the card. It is a fixer built for one allied trio rather than a universal one, and the incidental point of life tilts it slightly toward decks that want a small buffer more than raw efficiency. The tempo cost is the tradeoff this whole family carries: the land enters, sacrifices itself, and the basic it retrieves arrives tapped, so the fixing is real but never free. You spend a turn's worth of untapped mana to smooth your colors, which is why cards like this belong to decks valuing consistency over speed. The design decision worth flagging is that it fetches basics only, sidestepping the shuffle-and-tutor concerns around retrieving nonbasics while still thinning your library by one for later draws. It does the unglamorous work of a fixing land honestly, asking in exchange for a tapped land and a modest hit to your early tempo.

