Tranquil Thicket
Mana flood is the oldest tax on consistency: you run enough lands to make your curve, and the price comes due in the dead draws late, when every untapped Forest off the top is a card you cannot cash. The green entry in an early cycle of cycling lands settles that account with a blunt trade. It comes in tapped, taps only for green, and once the land slot has done its job, one green mana converts it back into a fresh look at your deck. The tapped clause is the whole bill: a land this freely interchangeable with a card cannot also arrive on curve, so the cost is paid in tempo rather than in the deck's card count. What has kept the template durable is how little it demands in return. It is not a synergy piece but a hedge, a slot that reads as a land when you are land-light and as a cantrip when you are flooded, with no deckbuilding tax beyond the green pip on its cycling cost. Decks built around graveyard fuel or discard-matters payoffs found a bonus in the act of discarding it, but the insurance function is the one that travels, which is why this exact land-or-cantrip skeleton keeps reappearing under new names across the decades since the original five debuted.

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Other printings
- Duskmourn: House of Horror Commander#318
- Bloomburrow Commander#350
- Modern Horizons 3 Commander#398
- Murders at Karlov Manor Commander#309
- MagicFest 2023#2
- Tales of Middle-earth Commander#341
- Commander 2021#408
- Historic Anthology 2#25
Show all 24 other printings
- Commander 2018#290
- Commander Anthology Volume II#274
- Duel Decks: Elves vs. Inventors#29
- Commander 2017#287
- Commander Anthology#279
- Duel Decks Anthology: Elves vs. Goblins#26
- Commander 2014#316
- Vintage Masters#320
- Commander 2013#329
- Duel Decks: Izzet vs. Golgari#82
- Commander 2011#292
- Magic Online Theme Decks#A140
- Archenemy#135
- Duel Decks: Elves vs. Goblins#27
- World Championship Decks 2004#jn326
- Onslaught#326























