Hengegate Pathway // Mistgate Pathway
The trade a modal double-faced land asks you to make is the whole design: no fumbling over which color to prioritize turn one, because you commit before the card ever touches the battlefield. Pick the white face or the blue face as you play it, and it enters untapped, producing one color forever with no life lost and no upkeep tax. The cost is optionality after the fact. Unlike a dual land that taps for either color at any time, this pledges to whichever face you chose the moment it hits, so the deckbuilding decision migrates to sequencing: which color you need first, and which you can afford to postpone. That constraint is exactly why the cycle slotted so cleanly into aggressive two-color decks, where the early curve wants untapped mana of a known color more than it wants late-game flexibility. The face card counts as a land in the graveyard, in exile, everywhere except the stack, so it dodges the awkward interactions that plagued earlier flip-permanent lands. It is the cleanest resolution yet of a tension mana bases have wrestled with since the original dual lands: how to get untapped color-correct mana on turn one without conceding a point of life or a tapped-land tempo hit, answered by moving the compromise off the battlefield and into your hand.





