Faceless Haven
The whole trick to a manland is that it's a threat that costs no card, and every one Wizards has printed has to pay for that free-slot advantage somewhere: Mutavault costs a colorless activation, Celestial Colonnade needs two specific colors, Raging Ravine wants a full four mana across two colors. This one taxes the manabase instead. The activation demands three snow mana, which means the free threat is only free if you've committed your lands, artifacts, or fixing to the snow supertype from the deckbuilding stage forward. That constraint is the design: it slots into decks that were already going snow for other payoffs, and it stays a dead colorless-tapper in anything that wasn't. The 4/3 body is generously sized for a manland, and the vigilance matters more than it reads, letting the land swing and still represent open mana or a blocker on the crackback. The all-creature-types clause is the quiet flourish, turning the land into a legal target and lord-recipient for whatever tribe it lands next to, though it's rarely the reason to run it. What makes it durable is the axis every manland lives on: it dodges the sweepers that punish a committed board, sitting as an inert land until the turn it decides to attack, immune to the sorcery-speed wraths that clear the creatures around it.





