Dismal Backwater
The taplands of this generation answer a problem older dual-land cycles never bothered with: the entry-untapped tempo loss versus the long-game payoff. The trade here is explicit. You surrender a turn of tempo (it always enters tapped, with no condition to dodge that) and in exchange you bank a single point of life on the way in. That gain-land cycle was a deliberate softening of the old painland math: where Underground River asked you to pay life for every untapped use, this one pays you once and never asks again. The life point is small, but it is the entire reason this color pair's incidental lifegain decks reach for the cycle rather than a cleaner untapped dual. The cost is the tempo, paid up front and in full; the card is built for decks that can afford to spend a turn now to never bleed for their mana later. As fixing, it is honest and unremarkable, which is exactly what a common-rarity two-color land is supposed to be: it smooths a Dimir manabase, slots into any deck that does not mind the tapped turn, and asks nothing more of you than patience on the play.



















