Sacred Peaks
The workhorse of budget fixing: two colors, no life loss, no shockland pain, all of it bought by arriving on the battlefield exhausted. What separates this Boros configuration from a plain color-fixing tapland is the type line. Carrying both Mountain and Plains means fetchlands can go find it, land-type-matters cards count it as the real thing, and effects keying off basic subtypes treat it as genuine rather than an approximation. That typing is the whole design lever: the tempo tax is flat and universal, but the Mountain Plains subtypes are what fold it into a fetch-based manabase and let it interact with everything that cares about land subtypes. It sits at the cheap end of a lineage running from the original dual lands through their many descendants, trading the untapped speed of the premium cycles for accessibility. The cost is a lost turn of tempo the moment it lands; the return is a fixer that behaves like a real dual for every purpose except the one where you needed the mana right now. Unglamorous by nature, but the entire category of tapped-but-typed duals exists precisely so that fair, grindy decks can run consistent color bases without paying in life or in cash.



