So it's been a year sinced I've played hearthstone. When I played the meta was grim patron, secret paladin, mech mage, control warrior, face hunter. I think it was classic cards and goblin vs gnomes were the cards out. Anyways so a good portion of my cards are not even in standard anymore, I'm wondering which packs should I be dumping my coins into? I'll probably end up buying expansions adventure quests with real money. Thanks guys
Depends! If you have tons to spend I would focus mainly on Gadgetzan as there are quite a bit of synergistic cards in there, Old Gods have a few key Crafts but most of the set isn't being played right now.
Karazhan has some great and versatile cards so it's a safe bet although they aren't as powerful as some people may want them to be.
Next expansion is also around the corner so you could always wait and see the nerfs at the end of this month and see if that changes anything for you.
All in all I believe Gadgetzan packs in bulk are the best right now if you have little to none of those cards, most decks are built around some key cards from that expansion with some Karazhan support.
I guess watching Kripp is one of the best ways to learn when paired when playing regular runs. He can be very salty sometimes but he is surely good and will teach you a thing or two when it comes to good arena play.
For about 3 months, as a free player, I have been spending my coins on nothing but arena, and I found it annoying but rewarding. I saw myself as a better player in general, and I started to understand board pressure, value and tempo a whole lot more. I suggest the best way to get better at arena is to constantly play it, even when you don't feel like to and you feel like you are tilting. Forcing yourself to think value-wise and set up synergies is a great exercise for this game. Playing ranked all of the time would make you very nervous and make yourself invest into OP decks that come and go, which is not healthy for an average, casual player.
Start of Year: Provoke the failure of 3 expansions, force nerfs on otherwise balanced cards, bring deckbuilding to an all-time low and get rotated one year earlier for being such a threat to the game's health. - Genn and Baku's historical entry on the White Book of Shit Design, shortly before retiring unpunished
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So it's been a year sinced I've played hearthstone. When I played the meta was grim patron, secret paladin, mech mage, control warrior, face hunter. I think it was classic cards and goblin vs gnomes were the cards out. Anyways so a good portion of my cards are not even in standard anymore, I'm wondering which packs should I be dumping my coins into? I'll probably end up buying expansions adventure quests with real money. Thanks guys
Depends! If you have tons to spend I would focus mainly on Gadgetzan as there are quite a bit of synergistic cards in there, Old Gods have a few key Crafts but most of the set isn't being played right now.
Karazhan has some great and versatile cards so it's a safe bet although they aren't as powerful as some people may want them to be.
Next expansion is also around the corner so you could always wait and see the nerfs at the end of this month and see if that changes anything for you.
All in all I believe Gadgetzan packs in bulk are the best right now if you have little to none of those cards, most decks are built around some key cards from that expansion with some Karazhan support.
Spend your coins in the Arena. As broken as it can be sometimes, it's currently the most balanced and diverse mode of play.
"Nerf Paper," said Rock.
Any advice for the arena? When I played It last year I didn't do very well lol
I guess watching Kripp is one of the best ways to learn when paired when playing regular runs. He can be very salty sometimes but he is surely good and will teach you a thing or two when it comes to good arena play.
For about 3 months, as a free player, I have been spending my coins on nothing but arena, and I found it annoying but rewarding. I saw myself as a better player in general, and I started to understand board pressure, value and tempo a whole lot more. I suggest the best way to get better at arena is to constantly play it, even when you don't feel like to and you feel like you are tilting. Forcing yourself to think value-wise and set up synergies is a great exercise for this game. Playing ranked all of the time would make you very nervous and make yourself invest into OP decks that come and go, which is not healthy for an average, casual player.
Spend them on a huge T3 Edwin VanCleef
Start of Year: Provoke the failure of 3 expansions, force nerfs on otherwise balanced cards, bring deckbuilding to an all-time low and get rotated one year earlier for being such a threat to the game's health.
- Genn and Baku's historical entry on the White Book of Shit Design, shortly before retiring unpunished