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Turtle Mage

  • Last updated Sep 19, 2020 (Scholomance Academy)
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Wild

  • 23 Minions
  • 6 Spells
  • 1 Weapon
  • Deck Type: Ranked Deck
  • Deck Archetype: Unknown
  • Crafting Cost: 9220
  • Dust Needed: Loading Collection
  • Created: 9/19/2020 (Scholomance Academy)
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  • Battle Tag:

    Maracuda#2880

  • Region:

    EU

  • Total Deck Rating

    29

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Turtle Mage Mulligan Strategy & Guide

VS FAST DECKS

Higher Priority (Keep every time)

  • Violet Spellwing – One-drop that also gives you a cheap removal spell.
  • Wandmaker – Cheap early-game minion that gives you a spell.
  • Astromancer Solarian – Cheap early-game minion with a potential upside later in the game.

Lower Priority (Keep only if certain conditions are met)

VS SLOW DECKS

Higher Priority (Keep every time)

s Turtle Mage, you are slowly chipping your opponent to death. Sure, you have a sweet combo with Tortollan Pilgrim and Potion of Illusion that allows you to chain one-cost Tortollan Pilgrims time and again, but you can also win without it. All that you really need is some minions on the board and some freezes to prevent the opponent from responding, and then you chip away their health from there.

The signature way to win is still the board-locking combo. When you play Tortollan Pilgrim, you get to cast a copy of either Potion of IllusionFrost Nova, or Blizzard. You can start at eight mana, where you can play a single Tortollan Pilgrim that casts Potion of Illusion so that you will have a one-cost Tortollan Pilgrim in your hand for the following turn. That one-cost minion can then be chained with more Potion of Illusions and some freezes to get a handful of Tortollans while freezing the opponent’s board.

Much of the time, however, you cannot afford to essentially do nothing on turn eight, so you need to work on your survival on that turn and then go off with the combo either on turn nine of turn ten, depending on whether you have drawn one Tortollan or both of them. With one Tortollan Pilgrim and ten mana, you can make a copy, then make two copies, and then freeze the board while still retaining a single one-cost copy in hand.

You can do a lot more than just bounce some Tortollans around on your combo turns. The most direct threat you have is Sunreaver Warmage, which only works if you’re holding a Blizzard or a random expensive spell. You can make multiple one-cost copies of the Warmage and shoot things, including face. You can also make copies of Jandice Barov for more threats, Khartut Defender for defense and healing, and Wand Thief or Wandmaker for additional resources. You need to watch your hand size and board because it is easy to run out of space on both once you have the combo in place: trade away minions that you do not want and make sure that you have enough space in your hand and on your board for your Tortollan Pilgrims.

The choice of freeze spell depends on the situation: if you want to keep your opponent’s minions where they are, use Frost Nova. Many decks cannot do anything if they have no board space, and in such cases, you do not want to create any for them. If you want to get through or clear the board, use Blizzard. Sometimes, it is less risky to just destroy the board instead of freezing it.

Your worst nightmare is drawing both copies of Potion of Illusion. Sometimes you can still make it work, especially if you manage to hold on to some kind of a board, and can make copies of good Battlecry minions, even if you can only do it twice in the entire game. Luckily, you have multiple tools to control your draws: Sphere of Sapience is a powerful tool that can send unwanted cards to the bottom of your deck, especially your spells, and the real star of the deck is Lorekeeper Polkelt.

Lorekeeper Polkelt can rearrange your deck so that the most expensive cards are on top. Polkelt is an excellent tool for drawing Tortollan Pilgrim exactly when you want it: you can grab it for turn eight if things are calm and you have time, or you can take it for turn nine and ten if things are a bit more hectic. If you can equip Sphere of Sapience before Polkelt, you can send the eventual spells to the bottom for a lot of Tortollan Pilgrim goodness. However, often you do not find both cards, in which case it is completely fine to play Lorekeeper Polkelt without Sphere of Sapience. You know how many draws you have until you get to your four-mana cards and the Potion of Illusions, so you can plan ahead and have enough turns with Tortollan Pilgrims to win the game. Even after you’ve hit both Potion of Illusions, there is still some more time until you’re out of Frost Novas, and your supply of one-cost Pilgrims should easily last long enough to use them.

Note that any effect that shuffles the deck after Lorekeeper Polkelt can mess up your plans. Bomb Warrior is the worst in this regard because their bombs reshuffle the deck every time a new one is sent in. You can also shuffle your own deck by having Astromancer Solarian die after you use Polkelt. You usually do not want that to happen.

VS AGGRO DECKS

Against aggressive decks, your main goal is to survive. If you can withstand their initial onslaught and get to your Tortollan Pilgrims, you should be able to get out of reach with endless freezes and Khartut Defenders or Earthen Ring Farseers. If the opponent uses weapons or other Hero attacks, Frozen Shadoweaver can keep the Hero locked as well.

Use your resources liberally in the early game. Violet Spellwing and Wandmaker can give you crucial cheap spells to activate Firebrand, and dropping an Imprisoned Observer on the board can help against Stealth minions. Jandice Barov on curve can help you contest the board, and sometimes ends up just winning the game. Any freeze effects that you draw can be used to delay the opponent and potentially push in damage even without ever seeing a Tortollan Pilgrim.

VS CONTROL DECKS

Against slower decks, you can pay more attention to finding your combo pieces to chew them up with repeated freezes or with Sunreaver Warmage. In these matchups, hand space and board space are your most important assets: you want to clear your hand of unessential cards so that you can make several copies of game-winning cards with Potion of Illusion when you reach your combo turns. If those cards end up generating enough tempo to win the game, that’s fine too.

You still play your early-game cards much in the same way as against aggro decks, but your mulligan is different as you focus on the combo pieces instead of survival tools.