Fountainport Bell
Two effects most decks would never pay separately for, stapled onto a single one-mana artifact and priced accordingly. The enters trigger is a soft land-fixer: it does not draw you the basic, it merely sets it on top, smoothing your next draw without advancing your hand. The sacrifice mode is the second act that earns the slot: pay one more, crack it with an activated ability, and turn the whole thing into a cantrip once you have milked the tutor. That sequencing is the quiet design idea here. You take the deck-thinning and the guaranteed land setup on the way in, then, on any later turn, spend the extra mana to convert the spent shell into a fresh card. There is nothing to protect in between: with no static abilities, the artifact does its only board work on entry, so the body sitting there is just deferred card selection waiting for a mana window. That deferral is the whole point. A one-mana permanent that fixes on the way in and replaces itself on the way out is a low-friction cog that never actively costs you a card, and cheap artifacts that fire on both entry and sacrifice do double duty in shells that count those events. The value is in how little it asks to run and how cleanly it exits: fixing and card flow folded into a single throwaway body.
