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Sheng’s Budget TGT Control Priest

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Introduction


Greetings, I’m Sheng, a Legend rank constructed and 7.5 win-average arena player. I run HearthstoneCoaching.com where our coaches have helped many students achieve the same.

If you’re new to Hearthstone, or just have a limited collection of cards—I feel your pain. It is often difficult to find cheap but viable decks that are competitive on the Hearthstone ladder.

When I first started playing Hearthstone, I would often go online to lookup the most popular decks played at Legend rank, and find that my limited card collection would not build them. While it was sometimes possible to substitute less important cards, there would often not be cheap substitutions for a crucial Epic or Legendary that completed a deck.

Given this dilemma, I’ve set out to help those of you with a limited collection by providing budget ladder-viable decks for each class.

Requirements


  1. Reach Level 10 to unlock all of the Basic cards for this class.
  2. Complete the Naxxramas and Blackrock Mountain expansions.
  3. Have 1300 dust available for crafting.

Design Principles


Many readers have requested that I update my Budget deck series to include cards from The Grand Tournament. I have to apologize for the delay in getting these written, as I wanted to spend as much time as possible play-testing and tuning these.

Unlike last time, I didn’t set a particular dust limit to any of my decks, but rather limited myself to just cards from the single player adventures (Naxxramas and Blackrock Mountain at the time this was written), and cards from the Basic, Common, and Rare cardsets. Many of these decks mirror the top decks played at the Legend level, with substitutions for some of the more expensive Epics and Legendaries. At the end of this guide, there is an additional section that provides substitutions for cards to make this deck even stronger.

Again, the overall goal is to provide a set of budget decks for newer players that can be viable to at least Rank 10, and even below.

Playstyle


Minions – 17


2x Northshire Cleric

  • The Cleric is the primary card draw engine for our deck. Generally, you won’t want to play her early, but rather save her when you can heal a minion to draw a card from her on the same turn.

2x Zombie Chow

  • Zombie Chow is great for helping us establish the board early against more aggresive decks. When Auchenai Soulpriest is on the board, his Deathrattle becomes a 5 damage bomb.
  • Many fun combos can be done with Auchenai Soulpriest and Circle of Healing to kill off your own Zombie Chows for lethal damage.

2x Wild Pyromancer

  • Aside from Zombie Chow, the Wild Pyromancer is our second line of defense against aggro decks. A single Wild Pyromancer combined with a spell can clear an entire board of 1 health minions.
  • Be careful when using Wild Pyromancer because he also deals damage to the minions on your own board. It’s very easy to forget this and end up killing your own Wild Pyromancer by playing The Coin carelessly.

2x Dark Cultist

  • One of the best 3 mana minions in the game. Not only is he beyond mana-efficient with a 3/4 body, he buffs a random minion with more health on your board when he dies. Opponents will have to awkwardly trade their board into him to eliminate him before you play other minions for his Deathrattle to target, or live with a minion that trades extremely effectively with other 2 or 3 mana minions.

2x Injured Blademaster

  • I’m really surprised that Injured Blademaster isn’t a class card for Priest, because no other class benefits from his damaged 4/3 body than Priest. A common combo is to play an Injured Blademaster and heal him on the same turn with either a Circle of Healing or your hero power. He also synergizes well with Northshire Cleric as he’s a target you can immediately heal to draw cards.
  • Just be careful playing him against Warrior as Execute is an extremely efficient counter.

2x Auchenai Soulpriest

2x Sludge Belcher

  • Sludge Belcher is an extremely annoying card to deal with, because when he dies, he leaves behind a smaller taunt. This effectively shuts down very aggressive decks, that are generally forced to use silence to get around him. Another benefit to the Sludge Belcher’s deathrattle is his synergy with . Good luck getting past that wall of taunts when both are on the board at the same time!

2x Sunwalker

  • After playtesting, I felt like Sunwalker was a good fit for the 6 mana slot, which is normally reserved for Cabal Shadow Priest in more expensive Priest decks. He’ll slow down the game against midrange and aggro decks and synergizes well with Kel'Thuzad.

1x Kel'Thuzad

  • Kel’Thuzad is a primary win condition in our deck. If you have any semblance of a board going into turn 8, he has a good chance of winning the game for you. His value only goes up when you have Deathrattle minions on the board that spawn more minions.

Spells – 13


2x Circle of Healing

2x Power Word: Shield

  • Gives 2 health to any minion for 1 mana, and draws you a card. Ideally, you’ll want to play this on a minion that would have died in a trade without the extra health. Make sure to play this first before your other cards, as the card you draw from it might be useful.
  • Also serves as a cheap enabler for Wild Pyromancer‘s passive.

1x Shadow Word: Pain

1x Shadow Word: Death

  • Shadow Word: Death allows us to deal with larger late game threats in an extremely mana-efficient manner.

2x Thoughtsteal

  • Thoughsteal gives our deck flexibilty by allowing us to play our opponent’s cards against them, and provides tempo in the late game when we run out of cards.

1x Velen's Chosen

  • A pretty broken spell if you can play it onto a minion early on. On turn 2, with The Coin, it can turn a Zombie Chow into a 4/7 with +1 Spell Damage.
  • When played on a minion, this card makes Holy Nova even more effective.

1x Shadow Madness

  • Generally we want to play or Harvest Golem, as the Deathrattle will spawn on your side of the board and belong to you.

2x Holy Nova

1x Mind Control

  • Allows us to steal our opponent’s most dangerous minions to use against them. We only play one copy due to Mind Control’s high casting cost. This isn’t a card we want two copies of in our hand early in the game.

Mulligan Guide


In general, you want to mulligan to setup your first three or four turns. Please note that there is a distinction between going first and going second in Hearthstone, and this should factor into your mulligan choices.

When going first, your advantage is the ability to play first. In addition, you gain mana crystals before your opponent. To take advantage of this, you want to be aggressive in your mulligan to put minions on the board.

When going second, your advantage is mainly The Coin, which gives you tempo over your opponent for a single turn, and also an extra card. Depending on the nature of your deck, whether it’s Aggro, Midrange, or Control, you’ll be looking for different things.

  • When playing an aggro deck, you’ll be looking for the same cards going second as you would going first. The objective is to quickly populate the board and bring down your opponent’s life total.
  • When playing a midrange deck, you’ll also be looking to get onto the board early, with the caveat that you can keep a single copy of a situational minion or spell that you think may be useful to counter an opponent. This spell might be something like a Kezan Mystic to counter classes with Secrets or removal like Frostbolt.
  • When playing a control deck, you’re looking to save the coin until much later in the game, generally when you can bring out a large late-game threat earlier than usual.

While I won’t make an exhaustive list, these are some of the cards you should consider keeping in your opening hand when playing this deck.

Minions

Spells

Gameplay Video


Upgrades


Here are a few simple substitutions that will make this budget deck even stronger.

Conclusion


I hope you enjoyed my guide to Budget TGT Control Priest. For more advanced Priest decks that aren’t constrained by a limited dust budget, check out the Priest meta decks on our sidebar. As always, I’d be happy to answer questions from you in the comments section.

Editor’s Note: Be sure to check out the New Players section, other Beginner and Budget Decks, and our most popular section – Monthly Top Meta Decks.

Coaching Lessons


If you’re interested in reaching Legend rank, or earning unlimited gold from arena, my team at HearthstoneCoaching.com would love to help! We’ve provided over a thousand hours of excellent coaching to students around the world.

The post Sheng’s Budget TGT Control Priest appeared first on Hearthstone Players.


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