Mind Twist
Random discard is the most punishing form of hand attack in the game: the opponent does not get to choose what survives, and the spell scales linearly with the mana poured into it. At a single black on top of the X, the rate here is brutal in a way no later printing has matched. Hymn to Tourach asked for two specific black mana and capped at two cards; the various fixed-count and player-targeting discard spells that followed all either locked the number, demanded a heavier color commitment, or moved off the random clause. This one scales as far as your mana does and asks almost nothing extra to cast.
The format consequences followed quickly. The card has been corralled out of every competitive environment where it could do its original work, never reprinted into a context that would unleash it again; it survives as a museum piece, a marker of how aggressively early Magic priced disruption before the design language for hand attack was settled. It is the design that taught Wizards what an X-cost discard spell costs, and every black discard spell printed since is, in some sense, a negotiation with what this one was allowed to do.
















