Rimewood Falls
The dual-typed tapland is old technology: enter tapped, and the compensation is two colors from one card. The snow supertype stacks a second dividend onto that same fixing. Every copy registers as a snow permanent, so it feeds the counting engines an entire subtheme is built around. Effects that scale with snow permanents, spells that demand snow mana, ramp that reads only snow sources: all of them treat this as a live source, which means the enters-tapped tax buys more than a color choice. It buys a resource those decks are already tallying. A plain Simic dual would sit unremarked on rate; the type line is where the value hides. The Forest Island printing also answers fetch effects and typal land searches, widening the pool of decks that can find it beyond what a bare snow dual would reach. This is a modest engine part, worth the slot precisely because a build that rewards snow density is happy to surrender one turn of tapland tempo to raise the count by another source. In a deck indifferent to snow it is a slow dual and little else. In one that cares, that lost turn is what the density costs, and those decks fold it into their curve without a second thought.

