mtg mind control cards The Mindskinner
SKU: 1882125941
mtg mind control cards

mtg mind control cards The Mindskinner

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Description

mtg mind control cards The MindskinnerThe Mindskinner Mono Blue Mill & Control Commander Deck (EDH, 100 Cards, Ready to Play!) Welcome to the mind maze. This Mono Blue Commander deck features The Mindskinner as its terrifying centerpiecea master of memory theft and mind unraveling. With a blend of mill, control, and clever tempo plays, this 100 card brew is perfect for players who love disrupting plans, denying resources, and watching opponents spiral into madness one card at a time.

💀 The Mindskinner – Mono-Blue Mill & Control Commander Deck (EDH, 100 Cards, Ready to Play!) 💀
Welcome to the mind maze. This Mono-Blue Commander deck features The Mindskinner as its terrifying centerpiece—a master of memory theft and mind unraveling. With a blend of mill, control, and clever tempo plays, this 100-card brew is perfect for players who love disrupting plans, denying resources, and watching opponents spiral into madness one card at a time.


🧠 Strategy Overview
The Mindskinner exiles opponents’ libraries one chunk at a time, gaining you free value and choking their options. This deck supports that plan with:
Relentless Mill: Drowned Secrets, Fraying Sanity, and Cut Your Losses snowball your mill engine fast—especially in multiplayer pods.
Control the Chaos: With counters like Didn't Say Please, Thought Collapse, and Aetherspouts, you hold the line while your opponents beg for mercy.
Steal Their Best Stuff: Cards like Diluvian Primordial, Reenact the Crime, and The Mindskinner itself turn their own decks against them.
Grind It Out: You’re not in a rush. With Midnight Clock, Brass Knuckles, and Psychic Spiral, you win the long game—over and over.


🔮 Commander Identity: Mono-Blue Control/Mill
Commander: The Mindskinner (Uncommon but underrated—this one punches well above its weight)
Theme: Control, Library Exile, Mill, Theft, Value
Win Conditions:
Mill the table
Steal key cards from opponents' decks
Swing with pumped or equipped utility creatures


🧩 Key Synergies & Highlights
Fraying Sanity + Cut Your Losses = one-player meltdown
Archive Trap = efficient card drains
Diluvian Primordial = cast everyone else's best spells
Swiftfoot Boots + The Mindskinner = protect the mind thief


🧱 Ready-to-Play Specs
✅ 100 cards
✅ Commander format legal
✅ Great for new players and experienced brewers alike
🎁 Whether you want to command the table with cold logic or just want to watch your friends squirm as their decks disappear, The Mindskinner is your cerebral weapon of choice.
🧠 They won’t even remember what hit them.

Commander
The Mindskinner

Creatures
Stitcher Geralf
Tempest Djinn
Mindshrieker
Ambling Stormshell
Body of Knowledge
Diluvian Primordial
Mirelurk Queen
Undead Alchemist
Vantress Gargoyle
Archetype of Imagination
Callaphe, Beloved of the Sea
Esior, Wardwing Familiar
Sage of the Falls
Silver Myr

Sorcery/Instants
Archive Trap
Aetherspouts
Reenact the Crime
Drown in Dreams
Curse of the Swine
Sorcerous Squall
Cut Your Losses
Into the Story
Confounding Riddle
Reality Shift
Aetherize
Flow of Knowledge
Psychic Spiral
Bond of Insight
Negate
Glorious Gale
Thought Collapse
Countermand
Resculpt
Didn't Say Please
Ravenform

Enchantments
Fraying Sanity
Drowned Secrets
Imprisoned in the Moon
Curator's Ward
Nerd Rage
Witness Protection
Jace's Erasure
Unable to Scream

Artifacts
Riverchurn Monument
Bonehoard
Midnight Clock
Ring of Evos Isle
Fireshrieker
Arcane Signet
Strength-Testing Hammer
Brass Knuckles
Assault Suit
Trepanation Blade
Sol Ring
Swiftfoot Boots
Sky Diamond

Lands
Bonders' Enclave
Castle Vantress
Rogue's Passage
40x Plains

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SKU: 1882125941

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Joseph Somma
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
Thorough history
Format: Hardcover
Levy provides a masterful history of American capitalism. His work is detailed and brilliantly written. You should buy this book for its last section: the age of chaos. Here Levy details the US economy since Reagan and identifies critical trends and questions we all need to address. This is not a book for a casual reader, each chapter is hard work. However, the rewards more than outweigh the effort.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2021
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Joseph
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
An interesting look at capitalism in the US
Format: Hardcover
Seller: Product arrived on time in good condition. No issues with the seller at all! Book: This is a pretty dense history of the US through the lense of capitalism. There are quite a few editing errors (typos, incorrect quotation formatting, etc) that are speed bumps to the flow of this book but don’t ruin the reading experience. There are also a few moments where a subjective claim is made using a historical event as a backdrop, but the claim isn’t elaborated on as well as it could be. I chalk this up to the focus of the book being on history and not economics, but I do think if a claim is made it would be interesting to have more data as to why the claim was made.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 5, 2023
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Gary Moreau, Author
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 4
Marx had the proletariat, Mao had the farmers, America has the owners of financial capital
Format: Kindle
What makes Jonathan Levy’s book so informative is that it is truly a parallel history of its politics and its economics. And only by viewing these two intertwined paths side by side can you truly understand the myth of the American free market. America’s politics and its economics have never, since the country’s founding, been separated. The state has been an integral part of everything economic to an extent that would make the most rabid socialist gasp in horror. The only difference is that while the Marxist state stood side by side with the proletariat, and Mao built the number two economy in the world on the support of farmers, America built its economic marvel on the backs of, and for the benefit of, the owners of financial capital. That’s not all bad, mind you. It takes workers, farmers, and the owners of capital to build a modern economy. The tension comes when there is a lack of balance between the importance the state attaches to each. And there can be little surprise that America’s politicians have put the owners of financial capital at the top of their list of priorities. Politicians, after all, can do nothing without power, and power comes via the electoral process, a process that is today fueled by obscene amounts of money. And who has all that money? The American economic narrative is a misleading tale of meritocracy and free markets. The Horatio Alger-based myth is that you are only limited by your skills and your ambition. And like most enduring myths there is a thread of truth to it. Many successful people truly deserve what they have achieved. But does anyone really possess $150 billion of personal merit? Can we statistically accept that the wealthiest nation in the world is also one of the most financially unequal without seeing a pattern of bias? Perhaps the most selectively quoted book in history is Adam Smith’s “Wealth of Nations”, published, strangely enough, in 1776. Often credited with being the father of capitalism, Smith argued that markets free of excessive regulation would be more efficient than markets that were overly regulated, although Smith “made no categorical separation between the political and the economic, or state and market.” Smith did, however, warn against the socially destructive power of monopolies, which unregulated markets will not protect against, and he correctly predicted that the excessive division of labor would lead to a degree of labor and wealth inequity that would destroy society. At the time when US Steel, General Electric, and General Motors, among many others, were the power behind America’s global economic hegemony, most Americans earned a living through wages. And those wages were made possible by long term fixed investments that created jobs. They were generally big bets that took a long time to earn a return but that aligned with the jobs-first priorities of most companies. (Employees first, communities second, shareholders a distant third.) And while not every employee enjoyed the same salary, the differences between the top earners and the average earners was a fraction of what it is today. That era, of course, is long over. The current economy is geared toward the creation of wealth through the short-term investment in assets that will appreciate rapidly and are highly liquid. At the moment that is the stock market and synthetic financial tools pedaled by hedge funds, banks, and the like. The problem is that the wage market encompassed much of America. The asset appreciation market encompasses only a tiny sliver of the richest among us. There is spillover, of course. The lawyers, analysts, consultants, bankers, and sales people who serve the asset appreciation market are doing quite well. But the man or woman who has less education and who might have made a decent living in a steel mill or car assembly plant, has lost out. And despite what the politicians will tell you, the gap is getting wider. (I spent a career in corporate industry, have a college degree in economics, have been a CEO, and have served on four public company boards. I know enough to know that Levy knows what he’s talking about.) The second important point to come out of all this is that economics is not really a “science” as most people think of that term. There is a shared jargon and there are commonly accepted principles. The very idea that there is an economy that is distinct from all other aspects of human existence, including the state, however, is a relatively recent concept. The weakness of the distinction, in fact, is clearly demonstrated by the remarkable reality of just how diverse the history of the American economy is. The sun doesn’t always rise in the east in the world of economics. In each of the economic eras Levy describes it is stunning how few people actually formulated the thinking that defined them. I will join some of the other reviewers in suggesting that the author could have spent more time explaining some of the jargon inevitably found in a treatise on economics. The layman obviously wasn’t his target audience but the book, I believe, could have read more smoothly and been much, much shorter. (The editor and publisher have to take some of the blame for this.) Even if you have to slog your way through the more tedious sections on global capital flows and such, however, you’ll get something from the book even if you’ve never set foot in an economics classroom. If you get no more than the fact that the free market is a myth and that most long term capital that actually creates jobs and income for the average American is actually provided by you, the taxpayer, not the Wall Street capitalist, you will better understand why there is so much division in our country right now. We don’t have a democratic economy. The young wonders of Silicon Valley would have nothing if it wasn’t for your tax dollars and your pension plan, if you’re still lucky enough to have one. We can do better. We have to. The economic inequity we have now is simply not sustainable.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 19, 2022
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Jose Calderon
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 5
Good value for the money.
Format: Hardcover
Book in excellent condition, delivered promptly.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 20, 2025
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Jared Dean
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 5
Great read.
Format: Paperback
Gives a great perspective of how technology has developed and shaped the economy.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 21, 2024

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