Planar Birth
Symmetry is the bait, and the deck that built its own graveyard is the one that bites. Returning every basic land from every graveyard reads like a public good: in practice, opponents rarely have a stockpile of basics waiting in the bin, so the "all graveyards" wording plays selfishly even as it sounds generous. The profit goes to the player who engineered the situation, feeding their own basics to a sacrifice engine like Zuran Orb and then refilling the battlefield with the whole crop at once. This is the recovery valve for an era thick with land-sacrifice and mass land-destruction tension: a way to undo your own land-eating combo or to claw back the manabase after a sweeper that hit the ground. The tapped clause is what stops it from becoming a same-turn mana surge; the lands come back ready for next turn, not this one, which is the line between a fair refill and a broken one. It is a payoff costumed as a utility spell, a card that looks even-handed on the page and only ever resolves in favor of the player who set the table.
