
Just look how Crawling Barrens from Zendikar Rising has proven to be in control decks. Even in non-Tribal decks, Devotion decks such as Mono-White, Mono-Blue, and Mono-Black Devotion won’t have any trouble playing Faceless Haven, either.įaceless Haven may be one of the best creature lands printed in awhile. Imagine this in Goblin decks in Historic, where Faceless Haven gains all of the Goblin boosts such as +1/+1 boosts and haste! Elves can also play this if they remain mostly mono-Green.

While having to focus entirely on Snow mana to activate this seems like an issue, mono-colored Decks which are already running Snow basic lands are happy to play this. However, the fact that it doesn’t have to tap to attack thanks to vigilance means it’s potent on both offense and defense. Like Mutavault, Faceless Haven also gains any tribal buffs that happen to be in play thanks to his Changeling ability. In many ways, Faceless Haven is much like a Standard staple land of the past in Mutavault. While that ability requires three mana from Snow permanents, which could include other copies of Faceless Haven, the opportunity cost to include this land may not be as high as people think, especially with snow basic lands and tapped dual lands coming with Kaldheim.

Also, it has another ability that allows it to become a 4/3 creature with vigilance and all creature types until end of turn. While it only adds colorless mana, because it is a Snow source, it helps you to cast permanents and use abilities that require Snow mana. Faceless Haven is a nonbasic Snow land card from Magic the Gathering’s Kaldheim set.
