I've recently become interested in trying to play miracle rogue after seeing a couple lists in the Hearthstone Championship. However I have never played any of the previous versions of miracle rogue before. I was wondering if anyone has any advice to playing this deck? I've read some things say it is pretty good vs control but I haven't found that to be true when playing it. This is the list I'm playing with.
### Miracle # Class: Rogue # Format: Standard # Year of the Dragon # # 2x (0) Backstab # 2x (0) Preparation # 1x (1) Togwaggle's Scheme # 1x (2) Acidic Swamp Ooze # 1x (2) EVIL Cable Rat # 2x (2) Eviscerate # 2x (2) Sap # 1x (3) Blink Fox # 1x (3) Edwin VanCleef # 2x (3) EVIL Miscreant # 2x (3) Fan of Knives # 2x (3) Hench-Clan Thug # 1x (3) Questing Adventurer # 2x (3) SI:7 Agent # 2x (4) Hench-Clan Burglar # 1x (4) WANTED! # 1x (5) Leeroy Jenkins # 1x (5) Zilliax # 2x (6) Gadgetzan Auctioneer # 1x (6) Heistbaron Togwaggle # AAECAYO6AgqyAq8ElwaKB4n0Asf4AqCAA6+RA7SRA5KXAwq0Ac0DmwWIB6QH3QiGCabvAo+XA5CXAwA= # Any help is appreciated!
You win by smashing them with an enormous Questing Adventurer or by creating near infinite Togwaggles. With Togs you overwhelm with them with Crowns (the thing that summons 2 legendaries).
Miracle rogue is a difficult deck to pilot because there are so many options. Do you hold your spells and go for a miracle turn?, Do you dump them for early tempo and try to snow ball a board? I haven't really played miracle for quite some time, so this advice might be dated, but miracle was never great vs control warrior. It was good into a lot of control and value oriented matches, but the deck simply had a limited amount of damage in it, and often times warrior could just out armour your damage. In general though, your game plan vs control is to try to pressure them early, get in some damage, then cycle through a huge portion of your deck to draw the reach you need to close the game out. You just need to plan around there life gain and play hard towards your outs.
I'm not sure why anyone would be watching anyone other than esteemed talented players and/or pro players if the intent is to learn from the best... As with any skill or talent you want to learn from the masters, not some amateur.
I've recently become interested in trying to play miracle rogue after seeing a couple lists in the Hearthstone Championship. However I have never played any of the previous versions of miracle rogue before. I was wondering if anyone has any advice to playing this deck? I've read some things say it is pretty good vs control but I haven't found that to be true when playing it. This is the list I'm playing with.
### Miracle
# Class: Rogue
# Format: Standard
# Year of the Dragon
#
# 2x (0) Backstab
# 2x (0) Preparation
# 1x (1) Togwaggle's Scheme
# 1x (2) Acidic Swamp Ooze
# 1x (2) EVIL Cable Rat
# 2x (2) Eviscerate
# 2x (2) Sap
# 1x (3) Blink Fox
# 1x (3) Edwin VanCleef
# 2x (3) EVIL Miscreant
# 2x (3) Fan of Knives
# 2x (3) Hench-Clan Thug
# 1x (3) Questing Adventurer
# 2x (3) SI:7 Agent
# 2x (4) Hench-Clan Burglar
# 1x (4) WANTED!
# 1x (5) Leeroy Jenkins
# 1x (5) Zilliax
# 2x (6) Gadgetzan Auctioneer
# 1x (6) Heistbaron Togwaggle
#
AAECAYO6AgqyAq8ElwaKB4n0Asf4AqCAA6+RA7SRA5KXAwq0Ac0DmwWIB6QH3QiGCabvAo+XA5CXAwA=
#
Any help is appreciated!
You win by smashing them with an enormous Questing Adventurer or by creating near infinite Togwaggles. With Togs you overwhelm with them with Crowns (the thing that summons 2 legendaries).
Look up JAlexander on Twitch. He plays only Rogue decks and plays one like this. You can watch Kripp play a similar list here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SvDgmL_jdjQ
Lots of practice and watching streamers,
only the good ones, most of them are a waste of time
Miracle rogue is a difficult deck to pilot because there are so many options. Do you hold your spells and go for a miracle turn?, Do you dump them for early tempo and try to snow ball a board? I haven't really played miracle for quite some time, so this advice might be dated, but miracle was never great vs control warrior. It was good into a lot of control and value oriented matches, but the deck simply had a limited amount of damage in it, and often times warrior could just out armour your damage. In general though, your game plan vs control is to try to pressure them early, get in some damage, then cycle through a huge portion of your deck to draw the reach you need to close the game out. You just need to plan around there life gain and play hard towards your outs.
I'm not sure why anyone would be watching anyone other than esteemed talented players and/or pro players if the intent is to learn from the best... As with any skill or talent you want to learn from the masters, not some amateur.
RDU plays Tempo Rogue, try his stream.