Wooded Ridgeline
The whole trade is the type line. This land taps for two colors, but the mechanically interesting thing is the clause you can't see in the mana ability: it carries the Mountain and Forest subtypes without the Basic supertype. That distinction is exact and load-bearing. A land search for "a Mountain" or "a Forest" can grab it from a single fetch, and effects that check whether you control a Mountain or a Forest are satisfied out of one slot; but anything that specifically wants a basic land skips it entirely. The tapped clause is the whole price paid for that dual typing, and it is a deliberately blunt payment: no life loss, no revealed card, no conditional untap, just a turn of tempo surrendered on the front end. That flatness is what separates this tier of fixing from the untapped duals that charge life or demand a matching land in play to enter untapped. Among the taplands it sits in the plainest bracket there is, and the reason to run it over a generic tapped dual is never the color pair. It is the reach the subtypes buy: a lever that quietly folds land-type-matters payoffs and basic-type fetch effects into something a single land can answer, well past the two colors it actually produces.


