Loam Larva
Most small green fixers hand you the basic immediately: cast the creature, take the land, smooth your draw, move on. This one withholds it. The basic goes on top of your library instead of into your hand, and that single change of destination is the whole design. You don't get the card now; you get certainty about your next draw, and that certainty is the resource. Anything that profits from knowing exactly what the top of your deck holds finds a use for this: effects that peek and act on the top card, sacrificial fetch plans, or a deck that just wants its land drop guaranteed rather than probabilistic. The placement converts a plain tutor into a setup tool that arms the following turn. The cost is that the land is locked there: you wait a turn for fixing you would normally hold, so the 1/3 body has to earn its two mana on its own while the deferred land waits. That toughness is doing more work than a fixing body usually has to. A 1/3 walls most early attackers and survives the turn it takes to cash in the tutor, where a 1/1 shell would be dead before the payoff arrived. The tension between deferred fixing and guaranteed top-of-deck information is why this asks to be built around rather than slotted in: the on-top placement is a liability for a deck that wanted the land in hand, and an asset only for one that wanted to know its next draw before it happens.
