Naya Panorama
The sacrifice-fetch in three-color clothing, tuned to the shard whose name it carries: any of Mountain, Forest, or Plains, the three allied colors that make up Naya. The price for that flexibility is steep next to a true dual-fetching land. The basic comes in tapped, you pay a generic mana to crack it, and you have spent the better part of a turn cycle to thin one card and fix one color. Where a true fetchland feeds shocklands and untapped duals, this one only finds basics, so it ramps your color count without ever touching a nonbasic. What it does buy, before that sacrifice, is a colorless mana the turn it lands, which keeps it from sitting dead in play while you wait. That tap-for-colorless mode is the quiet hinge of the whole cycle: the land is never doing nothing, just doing the least interesting possible thing until you are ready to cash it in. As a fixer it belongs to the slower, grindier end of three-color manabases, the decks that can afford to trade a tempo beat for a guaranteed third color and a slightly leaner library. Efficient it is not; reliable it is.




