Shared Roots
Rampant Growth handed itself down to this card almost unchanged, except for one wrinkle: the Lesson subtype. That single word rewrites where the effect lives. Instead of occupying a maindeck slot from the opening hand, this ramp can sit in your sideboard, retrievable by a card that can fetch a Lesson, which means the tempo cost of running fixing gets deferred until the moment you actually want it. That is a meaningful trade. Traditional two-mana ramp draws dead in the late game, when you have all the mana you need and would rather have a threat; a sideboard-adjacent Lesson lets you leave the effect on the bench and pull it only in the games and turns where a tapped basic advances your plan. The body of the effect is the plainest ramp template in the game (find a basic, put it in tapped, shuffle), and it deliberately stays that plain so the Lesson framework can do the interesting work. What the design is really testing is whether fixing should be a fixed cost paid at deckbuilding or a flexible one paid at instant of need. Rampant Growth answered the first way for decades. Wrapping the same effect in a Lesson answers the second, and the shuffle-and-fetch shell means it also thins a land from the library on the way out, a small edge that only matters because everything else about the card is so familiar.




