Hagra Mauling // Hagra Broodpit
Destroy effects at four mana have always been overpriced next to instant-speed answers asking for less, so the removal half of this land-or-spell pairing hands you a discount contingent on your opponent's manabase: it gets cheaper against anyone whose lands are all nonbasic. That is a self-correcting tax pointed at exactly the greedy, optimized fetch-and-shock builds most likely to skimp on basics, and it reads their own deckbuilding decisions back at them as a price cut. The pairing itself solves an old dilemma: the flooded draw where a land is dead and the color-screwed draw where a spell is dead. The trade you accept is that both faces are a step behind a dedicated version. The land enters tapped and produces only black; the removal is a beat slow and conditional on the mana it costs. Those inefficiencies bite hardest on a normal, functional draw, when you would rather have a land that comes in untapped or a kill spell that costs less and answers a threat on curve. What the inefficiency buys is flexibility that never eats a card slot, which is the entire pitch of the cycle. It is a hedge printed onto cardboard: you pay the tax on average draws for insurance against the two draws that lose games outright, the flood and the screw.




