Shivan Oasis
The tapland that taught a generation of players what fixing actually costs. When this slate of dual lands arrived, the deal was explicit and uniform: pick two colors, get both off one land, and pay for the privilege by surrendering a turn of tempo when it enters. No basic land type, no shockland life payment, no fetchability; just a flat tempo tax baked into the enters-tapped clause. That trade has aged into a kind of design baseline. Every untapped dual printed since gets weighed against the question this cycle posed first: is what you gain by entering untapped worth a death-trigger, a life payment, a conditional, or a basic-type fetch hook? Shivan Oasis answers the Gruul pairing specifically, the colors that tend to want their mana untapped most because they are built to attack early, which is exactly why a tapped Gruul fixer feels like the harshest version of the compromise. As fixing it is honest to a fault: it does one thing, it never lies about the cost, and it has been reprinted repeatedly because that clean, legible bargain remains the floor against which more ambitious lands are measured.





