Ley Druid
The original land-untapper, and the design template Wizards has revisited under tighter and tighter constraints ever since. The mechanic is the whole point: a creature that converts a tap into an extra land untap is a mana doubler with a body, and the body is the cost. The early pricing put that conversion at three mana for a 1/1 with summoning sickness, which meant the ramp did not actually begin until a turn later than the body landed. Every successor has tried to compress that window. Voyaging Satyr brought the cost to two and kept the untap open to any land. Arbor Elf did the same at one mana with the rider that the land has to be a Forest. Krosan Restorer added a threshold upgrade. The pattern is consistent: the more efficient the rate, the narrower the targeting or the heavier the build-around. What this card represents is the unconstrained version, green pricing a repeatable land-untap before anyone had calibrated how much it was worth and landing on a number that turned out to be far too high. The lineage it started runs through nearly every Gaea's Cradle deck, every Nykthos shell, every land-untap combo that wants a creature-shaped enabler.














