Highland Forest
Two things ride on top of the ordinary red-green mana here, and neither shows up in what the land actually taps for. The first is the snow supertype: because this is a snow permanent, it counts toward every mechanic that tallies snow sources, so the same land that fixes color also feeds snow payoffs without asking for a second slot. The second is that it carries both Mountain and Forest as basic land types, so anything that fetches, ramps into, or triggers off a Mountain or a Forest reads this as both. That combination is the entire reason to run it over a nonsnow tapland dual, which shares the tapped clause but carries neither the snow identity nor (in the case of a plain painless dual) the basic types. The tempo tax is the old bargain that pays for two colors on one card: enter tapped, lose a turn of pressure, and get flexible fixing in return. What the design does is stack extra identity onto that familiar frame so the cost buys three things at once, color, land-type synergy, and snow, rather than just the mana. It is a piece of manabase engineering rather than a marquee card, built so a single slot can do the work of several.

