Spotlight · Commander Manabase
Mikey & Don, Party Planners
Best Manabase for

Mikey & Don, Party Planners

Legendary Creature — Mutant Ninja Turtle
2GUGU
· UG
Ward {2} You may look at the top card of your library any time. You may play lands and cast Mutant, Ninja, or Turtle spells from the top of your library. If you cast a creature spell this way, that creature enters with an additional +1/+1 counter on it.
Budget
Filters
36 lands · total $88.30 budget: $100
U 19 G 19 C 5
Composition 20 Basics 6 Other Nonbasic 4 Fetch Lands 1 Bond Lands 1 Check Lands 1 Filter Lands 1 Horizon Lands 1 Pain Lands 1 Shock Lands

EDHREC hasn’t published enough decks for Mikey & Don, Party Planners yet, so this manabase isn’t drawn from real-deck inclusion data. It’s ranked by a land-quality heuristic instead — Commander staples and the strongest in-budget cycles first, then basics split across the identity. A solid baseline to start from, not a tuned list.

Commander Staples

$4.15 6

Cycle Picks · Best to Worst

$84.15 10

Basics

$1.20 20

About This Manabase

Mikey & Don, Party Planners is a UG commander with a UG color identity, so any land that produces only those colors is fair game. Our auto-built manabase above starts at the Optimized $100 tier. EDHREC doesn’t yet have deck data for Mikey & Don, Party Planners, so picks are ranked by a land-quality heuristic — Commander staples and the strongest in-budget cycles first (shocks and untapped fixing, dropping to scry and tap-duals as the cap tightens), with the rest filled by basics split across the identity. The picker always includes Commander staples like Command Tower, Exotic Orchard, Path of Ancestry , and others when they fit your identity — these are nearly auto-includes in any EDH deck. From the catalogued cycles, the picker pulled Breeding Pool, Windswept Heath, Flooded Strand, Wooded Foothills , plus 6 more for Mikey & Don, Party Planners's manabase.

Pick a tier above to reshape the manabase. The Budget ($25) tier leans on basics and the cheapest utility lands; Optimized ($100) adds the best mid-priced duals and untapped fixing the budget allows; Unlimited drops the price cap so premium duals and in-identity fetches come in. Filter out tap-lands for faster decks, or pin yourself to fetchable lands for a fetch-heavy ramp shell.