Rugged Prairie
Filter lands run on a counterintuitive premise: the colorless tap is the consolation prize, not the point. Feed this one a single red or white mana and it hands back two pips in any Boros combination, which makes it a converter rather than a source. It cannot fix from nothing, so it wants a manabase already producing colored mana to refine, but once you have a single red or white to prime it, it multiplies that into double-pips at no life cost and with no enters-tapped penalty. That is the structural trade against its peers: the painlands bleed life for the privilege of fixing on turn one, the tapped duals cost a tempo every time, and this design swaps up-front independence for downstream efficiency. It shines as the second or third land in a color-hungry hand, smoothing a stuck draw into exactly the pips a curve demands. The whole filter cycle leans on the same logic, but the Boros member is where the logic bites hardest, because aggressive two-color decks live and die on hitting their curve without paying life or a tapped turn, and this answers both at once. It is fixing that asks you to have already built something for it to convert, useless as a first source and quietly excellent as the piece that turns existing colored mana into the exact shape a hand needs.

Rules text
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Other printings
- Secrets of Strixhaven Commander#401
- Edge of Eternities Commander#174
- Final Fantasy Commander#417
- Tarkir: Dragonstorm Commander#389
- Bloomburrow Commander#327
- Outlaws of Thunder Junction Commander#314
- Commander Masters#1022
- Double Masters#325










