Indatha Triome
Land — Plains Swamp Forest
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This land enters tapped.
Cycling (
, Discard this card: Draw a card.)
- CMC
- 0
- Mana cost
- Color identity
- BGW
- Rarity
- rare
- Set
- Ikoria: Lair of Behemoths Promos
- Price
- —
- EDHREC rank
- #460
Indatha Triome enters tapped, but it pays you back with three basic land types, cycling, and legendary supertype — that last detail is why Kethis, the Hidden Hand decks run it at over 55% inclusion. The enters-tapped cost is real, but the flexibility of a fetchable, cyclable, legendary dual is worth one slow turn, and Floral Evoker can even recur it from the graveyard.
Best Commanders
Commanders with the highest synergy

Kethis, the Hidden Hand
Kethis, the Hidden Hand can cast legendary permanents from the graveyard, so Indatha Triome isn't just a land — it's a recursive mana source that fuels the engine repeatedly. The legendary supertype is the entire reason it slots in here at a 56% rate.
Esika, God of the Tree
Esika, God of the Tree wants as many legendary permanents as possible to trigger and feed its effects, and Indatha Triome qualifies as one while also fixing three colors simultaneously. A fetchable, legendary land that checks two boxes is hard to pass up in a five-color legendary tribal shell.

Go-Shintai of Life's Origin
Go-Shintai of Life's Origin's Shrine-focused builds still need reliable five-color fixing, and Indatha Triome pulls white, black, and green from a single land slot. The cycling clause also ensures it's never a dead draw late when you'd rather have a spell.

Nethroi, Apex of Death
Nethroi, Apex of Death operates in the exact Abzan wedge that Indatha Triome covers, making it one of the smoothest possible fixing lands for the deck. Nearly 50% of Nethroi lists include it specifically because there's no color-identity tension — it fits like a glove.

Atraxa, Praetors' Voice
Atraxa, Praetors' Voice decks span four colors, and Indatha Triome covers three of them while cycling away when the mana base is already stable. The 37% inclusion rate reflects that Atraxa lists compete for land slots harder than most, but the card still earns its spot.
Format Analysis
Where it lives, where it can’t
| Format | Verdict |
|---|---|
| commander | legal |
| legacy | legal |
| modern | legal |
| pioneer | legal |
| standard | not legal |
| vintage | legal |
| pauper | not legal |
| oathbreaker | legal |
Commander is where Indatha Triome does its best work — the legendary supertype interacts with an entire archetype of commanders, the three basic land types make it fetchable with cards like Farseek and Spoils of the Vault lines, and the cycling clause keeps it from being a liability in the late game. In Modern and Pioneer, triomes see play as flexible fixing in three-color shells where the enters-tapped penalty is acceptable on turn one or two, and cycling makes them better top-decks than a basic would be. Legacy and Vintage have access to faster, untapped duals, so Indatha Triome is a fringe consideration at best in those formats — the tempo loss matters far more when games are decided in the first few turns. Pauper and Standard are non-issues here; it's not legal in either.
Key Combos
Combo lines featuring this card




Floral EvokerVeilborn GhoulSquandered ResourcesIndatha Triome
Infinite +1/+1 counters on a creature; Infinite landfall triggers; Infinite self-discard triggers
View on Commander Spellbook ↗




Escape ProtocolFluctuatorBone MiserGolgari FindbrokerIndatha Triome
Infinite card draw; Infinite draw triggers; Infinite ETB; Infinite LTB
View on Commander Spellbook ↗Price Context
Current price
unknown tier
Current pricing data for Indatha Triome isn't available in this snapshot, but triomes historically settle in the $1–4 range depending on print run and demand, with Abzan-colored versions typically sitting at the lower end due to lighter competitive demand relative to Temur or Sultai equivalents. Check Scryfall or TCGPlayer for live pricing before buying.
Explore
Sources
Mentioned
Updated . Data from Scryfall, EDHREC, and Commander Spellbook.