Opulent Palace - Illustration by Sergey Glushakov

Opulent Palace | Illustration by Sergey Glushakov

When it comes to fixing your mana base, lands that can produce or give you access to multiple colors are some of the most important cards to have across formats. Today, Iโ€™ll go over the lands that do this for Sultai colors (). While the options are limited, these are solid investments that can slot into future builds no matter the format. Letโ€™s get into it.

What Are Sultai Lands in MTG?

Zagoth Triome - Illustration by Eytan Zana

Zagoth Triome | Illustration by Eytan Zana

Sultai lands in MTG help you to produce or fix black (), green (), and blue () mana, the three colors that make up the Sultai color combination. These lands are designed to make casting multicolor spells smoother by either tapping for one or more Sultai colors or searching for the right basic lands. For this list, I wonโ€™t include traditional fetch lands or lands that only partially fix Sultai colors, since they donโ€™t provide access to all three colors.

#3. Foreboding Landscape

Foreboding Landscape

Foreboding Landscape doesnโ€™t directly produce Sultai colors on its own. Instead, it functions like a Pauper-style fetch land that lets you search for a basic Swamp, Island, or Forest. Thatโ€™s a big deal in Pauper, since it's effectively an untapped land that can produce mana immediately while it also fixes your colors later. On top of that, you can cycle it for Sultai mana, which ensures you still get value even when youโ€™re flooded.

#2. Opulent Palace

Opulent Palace

Opulent Palace keeps things simple. It taps for any of the three Sultai colors, with the downside that it enters the battlefield tapped and lacks basic land types. Even so, if youโ€™re building on a budget, itโ€™s a perfectly reasonable alternative to more expensive options and it does its job reliably.

#1. Zagoth Triome

Zagoth Triome

Zagoth Triome is the Sultai land par excellence. Its three basic land types allow you to fetch it with any fetch land or landcycling effects like Generous Ent. It also has built-in cycling for 3 generic mana, which makes it useful at every stage of the game. Since its release, it has become a staple in Eternal formats and Commander alike.

Wrap Up

Opulent Palace - Illustration by Adam Paquette

Opulent Palace | Illustration by Adam Paquette

While there arenโ€™t many true Sultai lands, the ones we have are excellent tools to fix your colors when you need them. They become even stronger when you pair them with other lands or effects that can search for them or complement your overall strategy. Weโ€™ve already seen Wizards experiment with one-off designs for other color combinations, like Oscorp Industries for Grixis (), so itโ€™s very possible weโ€™ll see something similar for Sultai in future sets.

If you'd like to see tri-lands in other color combinations, check out these articles: Abzan, Jeskai, Mardu, Temur, Esper, Naya, Grixis, Jund, and Bant.

What do you think? Would you like to see more Sultai lands printed down the line to further power up your decks? Let us know in the comments or on the Draftsim Discord.

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2 Comments

  • Grymm February 4, 2026 5:18 am

    …all 3 huh?

    • Timothy Zaccagnino
      Timothy Zaccagnino February 4, 2026 6:48 pm

      Yup, just wait til #4 comes out, then we’ll be cooking.

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