Mana Confluence VS City of Brass - A Magic the Gathering FAQ
If you've been playing Magic the Gathering for a long time,
you might look at Mana Confluence and think: "Wait, isn't this City of Brass?" You would
be mostly correct. However, this "pain" land is actually slightly
better than the classic City of Brass.
City of Brass VS Mana Confluence
With City
of Brass, anytime it became tapped, you took
one damage. However, with Mana Confluence, you only take damage when you
actually tap it for mana. While this is a very minor difference, it does
technically make it very slightly better. It also means that there are now
functionally two Cities of Brass in existence. This means you can essentially
run 8 copies of the same card in one Constructed deck.
While paying 1 life to color-fix can
sound like a lot, keep in mind that City
of Brass has been used for a very long time in multiple formats. It's still
used in some fringe Modern decks. Also, anything that would tap down lands
would force you to take 1 damage.
However, Mana Confluence only pains
you when for tapping mana.
Basically, it's a five-color
pain land. However, it doesn't have the ability to tap for colorless mana
without a life cost, such as the traditional "pain lands" from Ice
Age/Apocalypse/Tenth Edition.
There's another case in which Mana Confluence is strictly better than City of Brass. Urborg, Tomb of Yawgmoth,
which makes all lands in play Swamps in addition to their other types, was in
Standard at the same time as Mana Confluence. This is great, because Urborg
gives Mana Confluence the additional ability to tap for Black mana. Because
it's an additional ability, you can tap it for Black mana without paying 1
life. While this is now a corner case ruling, it's important to remember.
Mana Confluence in Pioneer,
Modern, and EDH
After enjoying quite a bit of play in
Standard, Mana Confluence continued to see play in Legacy Dredge decks. It also saw play in some
Modern Green/White Humans decks and the occasional Allies deck. Interestingly
enough, some Ad Nauseum combo lists would play City of Brass over Mana
Confluence, and it's not really clear as to why.
With the introduction of the Pioneer
format in October 2019, Mana Confluence began to see some renewed play. Because
there are no fetch-lands available in Pioneer (a Modern format that begins with
Return to Ravnica and has a separate banlist including the Khans fetches), mana
fixing is at a premium. However, Mana Confluence typically only sees play as a
singleton in a few decks: Niv to Light, Gruul Aggro, and Golgari Stompy. Still,
the renewed interest in the card is a good thing, especially in a format that
lacks City of Brass.
Mana Confluence is definitely worthy
of EDH / Commander play. According to EDHREC, Confleunce sees slightly more
play than City of Brass, but by a miniscule
margin as of April 2020. Unsurprisingly, both usually
see play in the same decks.
With the release of Commander 2016's
four-color commanders, Mana Confluence saw a slight rise in play. Atraxa,
Praetor's Voice, Breya, Etherium Shaper, and Yidris, Maelstrom
Wielder are the three Commanders who utilize Confluence the most. Even with four and five color decks becoming easier to play as
time goes on, a five-color land like Mana Confluence will always find a home.
Mana Confluence Price History
As a solid mana-fixer and a
functionally superior version of an existing land, it's not surprising that
Mana Confluence is a card with a fair amount of demand. Most of that demand
comes from Commander, which is also not surprising, as it can fit in pretty
much any three-color, four-color, or five-color EDH deck.
The price of Mana Confluence steadily
crept up from $5 to $8 after it rotated from Standard in October of 2015. But,
in early 2019, original printings of Mana Confluence crept up to $9-10 before
jumping to $15 in April. The card then doubled in price almost overnight with
the late October 2019 announcement of the Pioneer format. In mid-2020, it was
holding a $25 price point.
Mana Confluence was reprinted as a
Zendikar Expedition in Oath of the Gatewatch, interestingly just a few months
after losing its Standard eligibility. The Expedition started out at $87.99
before falling to around $48. But in
early 2018, there was a buyout of the Expedition, which caused to price to
shoot through the roof before it stabilized at $125. The price gradually
settled back to around $100, shooting back up to $125 and steadily returning to
$100.
Both versions of this land are solid
pickups going forward, especially the Expedition version. It's true that Mana
Confluence could be reprinted at some point. But, even if it is, there's plenty
of demand for it, since it fits into such a wide variety of decks.
It's actually a bit surprising that
we don't see this card more in Modern than we do. But, in any case, this land
is superior to City of Brass. If nowhere else, Mana Confluence will see play in
EDH for many years to come.
(pioneer)
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