Played since BRM. Yet to hit legend even 1 time. I would only want to hit it once, after that I only care about getting to rank 5 and getting all heroes to golden and after that 1k wins.
My highest rank is rank 2 3 stars where I am currently. Last time highest rank was rank 3 5 stars in Rastakhan with Mechathunlock. Currently I'm playing Treant Druid. It isn't the best deck out there but Regis hit legend with it.
I just find the gap between rank 5-legend and anything below that like night and day. Tell you I played Treant Druid at the start of expansion but got only to rank 11 and stopped playing it. Started playing it after 2nd nerfs and Regis made video of him getting to legend with the deck. I went from rank 11 0 stars to rank 5 3 stars with 0 losses. It is easily the best climb I have ever gotten. But now I just feel like rank 5-legend is full of people with legend card backs, golden heroes and 1k hero portraits basically long time ranked players. And yes even after 5 years I have 0 golden heroes cause I have played mostly arena and meme decks.
It just makes me super pissed and angry for not ever hitting legend. And like with playing aggro it's oh you get a bad hand well guess you lost but I have spent way too much time trying to hit legend with a control deck, the archetype I enjoy the most.
Edit: Oh and reason I don't craft the decks I see up here is because I would lose my sanity playing mirror matches 24/7. I don't see that many Treant Druids.
It's easier now because of the Rank floors. I forget the exact number from the infographic about a month ago, but the player group from R5-Legend went from like top 2 percentile to top 5 percentile.
It's actually very easy, stick to a tier 1 deck, try to catch some pro players playing with it on Twitch if you want to learn faster, then just play ranked until you reach legend. As long as you have positive winrate, it is possible. If you are tilted due to a lose streak (it always happen), just do something else until you have settled down. It is actually the most difficult thing to do when laddering, knowing when you are tilted and stopping before losing too much ranks.
It might take some time but in the end you will make it. If you want to go deeper, Vicious Syndicate is the best site to analyse the meta decks.
Well yeah it is this but how can I do it without playing tier 1 or at least the popular tier 1. Like I said my sanity can't handle constant mirror match ups. It's more fun when your deck is not the same as your opponents. The rest tips are basically what I already know (you know 5 years of experience in this game)
Like is it just a straight fact that you cant get to legend with any other but tier 1 deck?
Just play something that counters the decks you play against.
i hit legend during boomsday with priest (up to rank 3) and then switched the deck to recruit hunter. Switching the deck was key to success. I almost only met taunt/azalina druids at rank 3 and above and they just couldn’t handle a well timed recruiT. find this Sweet Spot in this actual meta and it’s easy sailing.
making legend is nothing but a grind..I've done it numerous times and when I look back at the time I wasted I don't even know what I was thinking. Play the same deck and don't switch, learn the matchups and when you mulligan, hope for the best. Once you get the card back there is no reason to ever do it again. There really is no difference from rank 5 and legend in terms of skill. The only difference is how much time you want to waste getting the last 25 stars.
it's not hard, you just need to play gala rogue or embiggen druid. pick one so you can master it and don't play any fun decks on ranked, just stick with those meta decks and your win rate will definitely be above 50% so it's just a matter of how many hours it will take you. you can get to legend with other decks but they require more skill to keep your win rate much north of 50%.
I am a frequent top 100 player. Just like you, I hate playing mirror matches so I always make my own decks and climb with them. The fun in Hearthstone for me is to make my unique decks and stand against the meta. For example, I was the creator of competitive Holy Wrath Paladin and Embiggen Druid (https://www.hearthpwn.com/members/Myu/decks). I hit legend when nobody was playing these decks.
It appears that you insist on climbing with off-meta decks. Mainstream or not, the deck you are playing needs to be strong if you want to hit legend. So what makes popular meta decks with high winrate? These popular decks need to be both strong and easy to pilot. There are unpopular decks out there with the required strength. But the difficulty of those decks brings down the winrate on paper because incompetent players would lose with them (Topsy Turvy Priest). Thus, strong off-meta decks are usually difficult to play. You need to be very good at this game to climb with them.
If you perfect your gameplay skills, you can hit legend with most decks listed on HSReplay with winrate above 45%. (I hit legend with Pogo Rogue when the overall winrate was 40%) But the difficulty is that we often do not realize our mistakes. I recommend making a few close friends with similar skills as yours. Spectate each other to give suggestions and point out mistakes. Try to stick to the same deck as you approach legend, adapting to new decks is usually both time-consuming and star-consuming.
When you really understand how Hearthstone works, you can start making competitive decks by yourself. It is quite challenging yet truly rewarding.
I don't think it changed at all from before. It's mostly just a grind.
The first time is the hardest, though, because anxiety as you starting getting closer to it start making an impact on you. After the first Legend, it was much easier. But still grindy enough that most of the time you'll just prefer to settle for Rank 5 unless you love the grind or spamming a specific deck.
This month, with a 66% winrate, my decktracker shows a 88-46 record for Galakrond Warlock (though it was actually much less since I practiced a lot in Casual and I can't make the thing only show Ranked stats). You may get winstreaks and losestreaks that can help or break you, though. I had a 6 loss streak at one point and almost a 9 win streak during the final push, for example.
You don't absolutely need a T1 deck for it, specially if you really don't like a specific playstyle or is really bad with it. I, for example, can't reasonably climb with stuff like Pirate Warrior or Face Hunter, though many play it even at high Legend. Competitive subs show people reaching Legend with stuff like Highlander Galakrond Priest, Highlander Paladin and etc.
So you CAN reach it with less known or off meta decks... BUT you'll need to not only play it really well, but also to know really well the OTHER decks you're playing against (this goes too for meta decks, but it's more brutal on off meta). You'll probably need more games as well.
Another thing: during my first climb, when I was super anxious and could get easily tilted, it was really hard to climb. Even dropped like a rock sometimes. At some point I just stopped caring and just played to better my game against strong opponents. When I took that off my shoulders and played with more calm, it was a lot better to climb. Anxiety returned during the final games at rank 1, but by then I had realized that by reaching ranks 2 or 1, I was already good enough to be in Legend, it was a matter of time, concentration and of course, some luck too. And then I got there.
Don't play when you're hungry, tilted, super anxious, angry and such. This will make more difference than the deck, probably. You'll be much more susceptible to errors that will cost you games. Faced a tough loss to swallow? Take a short break before queing again.
Golden and 1000 win portraits mean nothing, I faced terrible players with those things. I myself play for 2 years and only this exact month with Gala Lock that I got my first golden portrait. Since the 1000 win portrait was retroactive with all wins you already had, you're gonna find plenty of people with it even in super low ranks simply because of time played and nothing else. You really shouldn't be intimidated by these things. If else, take extra motivation to beat those guys.
I got to legend for 3 months in a row in 2018 with big spell mage then took a break and never got to legend again, just played for rank 5 to get the golden epic card. 4 days ago I gave it another shot for legend and picked galakrond rogue (which is one of the best decks right now), everytime I faced embigged druid I switched to holy wrath paladin (another deck that does really well in this meta but gets countered by rogue and token druid). Got from rank 7 to legend in 3 days and it felt pretty easy. I don't know the winrate because I don't use a deck tracker but I'm sure it was pretty high.
Any player reaching regularly rank 5 can reach legend. Many players wrongfully think it's a question of skill/talent. It's just a grind. Sure, a talented player will reach legend a little bit faster than a good player but he will have to grind like everybody else. I regularly reach rank 5 every month. Then, I fool around trying decks..much more fun and interesting.
Just reached legend last season for the very first time since the beta came out... Yup. Like you I'm an on and off player, but really only tried my hardest last two seasons. May I just say, all I encountered up at rank 2 and 1 were Druids (treant || embiggen) and Rogues (highlander). Barely any warriors, hunters, our warlocks. I fought one Paladin and a few shaman and priests.
Was it hard? Yes. Took me at least 150+ games. Did I tilt? Yes, lost 7 games in a row, won one, then lost 4 more. I was so mad, I took to Reddit to ask if that was normal. I had dropped from rank 1: 3 stars, back to rank 3 in minutes. It took me about a weekend to rank up that far.
Here's what I my learned from my experience:
- I used my own version of pirate warrior. It does extremely well against everyone and had a chance to beat everyone. Galak warrior seemed to be just too slow. If you invoke enough but never get him, you're likely dead. Don't invoke him enough, he's a dead card. Rogue can get away with it because they can draw so much and everything they do practically costs zero. You've seen it, they Galak into Togg, get the wand, play their entire hand for 0, play 0-cost Alex to get 2 more zero cost cards... Fun and definitely fair.
- the guys are right about sticking to one deck. You'll learn it intimately and know it's strengths and weaknesses against the other decks.
- as a card game it is ultimately luck based. You try to gimmie into your best starting hand, but sometimes just get crap. Or you have a great starting hand but draw poorly. When you know your deck well and your opponent's deck, you can feel when you lost simply because you had a bad hand. Or you lose because of insane luck. While incredibly frustrating, if you know the opponent only won because of a top deck or Alex Dragon, you know your play was good and deck is capable.
- if you see a pattern emerging in opponents don't be afraid to modify your deck. For example, when dealing with your treant deck, I found I was doing really well but kept falling down because of a big taunt sucking up all the damage. I removed Leroy and another underperforming card to get 2 spell breakers. Silence was indeed, golden and I started noticing more wins coming through in otherwise close matches were I wouldn't have closed it out previously.
- opponents at rank 5 onwards are all the elites. Assuming you all know each other's decks, and everyone pretty much has the same decks, and everyone is at equal playing skill, the only factor then separating all of you... is luck. The treant, embiggen and res-priest are super easy to pilot, in my opinion. From a pirate warrior's point of view, if you had the perfect cards and I had bad cards, it would've been impossible for me to win against all that value. For me to win against res-priest, I had to have perfect start and draw well, while they had to have a bad start, for me to win.
- perhaps try a more aggro deck. You'll get more games in, and either win fast, or lose fast. I'm married and work full time, so didn't have a lot of time to play. I made it to legend with only three days left of the season. Funnily enough, all the top decks are not Galak decks with the exception of the Rogue and Warlock. Pirate warrior only has Anchaar and Greenskin legendaries so is pretty cheap to craft. I didn't come up against a single pirate warrior deck if you don't like mirror matches. I liked pirate warrior because it was reactive and took some planning. Res-priest doing nothing for the first 5 turns is not my idea of fun.
- use a deck tracker. Watch back the replays to see if you could have done better. If your win ratio is hovering at 50%, (win one, lose one) it may be time to assess your deck. Annoyingly, new cards are coming out in the next few weeks and the meta does change. If you go from "I was beating that deck easily before" to "why can't I win a game against the seemingly same deck", that's an indication of things changing.
Good luck; it is hard, and tilting is a heartbreaker. I never knew if I could make it, but it is possible. I'm a bit of a completionist myself, and I saw hitting legend as "finishing Hearthstone". Don't worry about getting all the golden panels, that's just painful and I'm sure you have something else better to do with your life. Constantly winning at that high rank is quite challenging to get all those wins. Sometimes the game felt rigged; no joke. Several games in a row my opponents would get insane plays/top decks were I was incredulous about it; muttering: "no F*"!ing way, you cheater!". When that happens, yes, WHEN, just take a break.
It's been said a million times before but I always find that it bears repeating, and I have to often remind myself about it, but it's basically a pure numbers game. Unless you're really struggling with a deck or making big mistakes in your play, it literally is just about the number of games you play. As someone said earlier, 51% will get you there, it'll just take about 300 games from rank 5, where allike a 63% winrate will get you there in about 75.
It's been said a million times before but I always find that it bears repeating, and I have to often remind myself about it, but it's basically a pure numbers game. Unless you're really struggling with a deck or making big mistakes in your play, it literally is just about the number of games you play. As someone said earlier, 51% will get you there, it'll just take about 300 games from rank 5, where allike a 63% winrate will get you there in about 75.
Indeed. You really need time unless your winrate is pretty high.
51% is not high enough.. You will gain you 2 stars every 100 games you play (51 wins, 49 losses), so to get 25 stars you will need to play 1250 games. That’s about 40 games per day for a month. So I would say 51% does not get you to legend.. ;)
60% gives you 20 stars per 100 games, so you’ll still need to play 125 games, which is like 4 games per day in a month..
Even when you would have 70% you’ll still need to play 2 games per day for a month...
it depends on the time you have and the winrate...
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Played since BRM. Yet to hit legend even 1 time. I would only want to hit it once, after that I only care about getting to rank 5 and getting all heroes to golden and after that 1k wins.
My highest rank is rank 2 3 stars where I am currently. Last time highest rank was rank 3 5 stars in Rastakhan with Mechathunlock. Currently I'm playing Treant Druid. It isn't the best deck out there but Regis hit legend with it.
I just find the gap between rank 5-legend and anything below that like night and day. Tell you I played Treant Druid at the start of expansion but got only to rank 11 and stopped playing it. Started playing it after 2nd nerfs and Regis made video of him getting to legend with the deck. I went from rank 11 0 stars to rank 5 3 stars with 0 losses. It is easily the best climb I have ever gotten. But now I just feel like rank 5-legend is full of people with legend card backs, golden heroes and 1k hero portraits basically long time ranked players. And yes even after 5 years I have 0 golden heroes cause I have played mostly arena and meme decks.
It just makes me super pissed and angry for not ever hitting legend. And like with playing aggro it's oh you get a bad hand well guess you lost but I have spent way too much time trying to hit legend with a control deck, the archetype I enjoy the most.
Edit: Oh and reason I don't craft the decks I see up here is because I would lose my sanity playing mirror matches 24/7. I don't see that many Treant Druids.
Me? Gongaga.
It's easier now because of the Rank floors. I forget the exact number from the infographic about a month ago, but the player group from R5-Legend went from like top 2 percentile to top 5 percentile.
So easier, but by about 3%.
It's actually very easy, stick to a tier 1 deck, try to catch some pro players playing with it on Twitch if you want to learn faster, then just play ranked until you reach legend. As long as you have positive winrate, it is possible. If you are tilted due to a lose streak (it always happen), just do something else until you have settled down. It is actually the most difficult thing to do when laddering, knowing when you are tilted and stopping before losing too much ranks.
It might take some time but in the end you will make it. If you want to go deeper, Vicious Syndicate is the best site to analyse the meta decks.
Well yeah it is this but how can I do it without playing tier 1 or at least the popular tier 1. Like I said my sanity can't handle constant mirror match ups. It's more fun when your deck is not the same as your opponents. The rest tips are basically what I already know (you know 5 years of experience in this game)
Like is it just a straight fact that you cant get to legend with any other but tier 1 deck?
Me? Gongaga.
You can play any deck to legend as long as you maintain a >51% winrate.
Just play something that counters the decks you play against.
i hit legend during boomsday with priest (up to rank 3) and then switched the deck to recruit hunter. Switching the deck was key to success. I almost only met taunt/azalina druids at rank 3 and above and they just couldn’t handle a well timed recruiT.
find this Sweet Spot in this actual meta and it’s easy sailing.
making legend is nothing but a grind..I've done it numerous times and when I look back at the time I wasted I don't even know what I was thinking. Play the same deck and don't switch, learn the matchups and when you mulligan, hope for the best. Once you get the card back there is no reason to ever do it again. There really is no difference from rank 5 and legend in terms of skill. The only difference is how much time you want to waste getting the last 25 stars.
it's not hard, you just need to play gala rogue or embiggen druid. pick one so you can master it and don't play any fun decks on ranked, just stick with those meta decks and your win rate will definitely be above 50% so it's just a matter of how many hours it will take you. you can get to legend with other decks but they require more skill to keep your win rate much north of 50%.
In the sense of rewards, there is little incentive to reach legend. Legend rewards you 550 dust, 3 golden commons, and the coveted golden epic.
Getting to rank 5, which is farrrrrrrrr less stressful to get rewards you just about the exact same just 50 less dust and one less golden common.
Use your brain and just make it a point to get rank 5 every month. No reason to go farther unless you have an inferiority complex.
I am a frequent top 100 player. Just like you, I hate playing mirror matches so I always make my own decks and climb with them. The fun in Hearthstone for me is to make my unique decks and stand against the meta. For example, I was the creator of competitive Holy Wrath Paladin and Embiggen Druid (https://www.hearthpwn.com/members/Myu/decks). I hit legend when nobody was playing these decks.
It appears that you insist on climbing with off-meta decks. Mainstream or not, the deck you are playing needs to be strong if you want to hit legend. So what makes popular meta decks with high winrate? These popular decks need to be both strong and easy to pilot. There are unpopular decks out there with the required strength. But the difficulty of those decks brings down the winrate on paper because incompetent players would lose with them (Topsy Turvy Priest). Thus, strong off-meta decks are usually difficult to play. You need to be very good at this game to climb with them.
If you perfect your gameplay skills, you can hit legend with most decks listed on HSReplay with winrate above 45%. (I hit legend with Pogo Rogue when the overall winrate was 40%) But the difficulty is that we often do not realize our mistakes. I recommend making a few close friends with similar skills as yours. Spectate each other to give suggestions and point out mistakes. Try to stick to the same deck as you approach legend, adapting to new decks is usually both time-consuming and star-consuming.
When you really understand how Hearthstone works, you can start making competitive decks by yourself. It is quite challenging yet truly rewarding.
Is the assumption that you play standard a fair one?
I don't think it changed at all from before. It's mostly just a grind.
The first time is the hardest, though, because anxiety as you starting getting closer to it start making an impact on you. After the first Legend, it was much easier. But still grindy enough that most of the time you'll just prefer to settle for Rank 5 unless you love the grind or spamming a specific deck.
This month, with a 66% winrate, my decktracker shows a 88-46 record for Galakrond Warlock (though it was actually much less since I practiced a lot in Casual and I can't make the thing only show Ranked stats). You may get winstreaks and losestreaks that can help or break you, though. I had a 6 loss streak at one point and almost a 9 win streak during the final push, for example.
You don't absolutely need a T1 deck for it, specially if you really don't like a specific playstyle or is really bad with it. I, for example, can't reasonably climb with stuff like Pirate Warrior or Face Hunter, though many play it even at high Legend. Competitive subs show people reaching Legend with stuff like Highlander Galakrond Priest, Highlander Paladin and etc.
So you CAN reach it with less known or off meta decks... BUT you'll need to not only play it really well, but also to know really well the OTHER decks you're playing against (this goes too for meta decks, but it's more brutal on off meta). You'll probably need more games as well.
Another thing: during my first climb, when I was super anxious and could get easily tilted, it was really hard to climb. Even dropped like a rock sometimes. At some point I just stopped caring and just played to better my game against strong opponents. When I took that off my shoulders and played with more calm, it was a lot better to climb. Anxiety returned during the final games at rank 1, but by then I had realized that by reaching ranks 2 or 1, I was already good enough to be in Legend, it was a matter of time, concentration and of course, some luck too. And then I got there.
Don't play when you're hungry, tilted, super anxious, angry and such. This will make more difference than the deck, probably. You'll be much more susceptible to errors that will cost you games. Faced a tough loss to swallow? Take a short break before queing again.
Golden and 1000 win portraits mean nothing, I faced terrible players with those things. I myself play for 2 years and only this exact month with Gala Lock that I got my first golden portrait. Since the 1000 win portrait was retroactive with all wins you already had, you're gonna find plenty of people with it even in super low ranks simply because of time played and nothing else. You really shouldn't be intimidated by these things. If else, take extra motivation to beat those guys.
any bonobo face only stupid deck player can hit it :D
If you can reach Rank 2 you should be able to reach Legend. Depending on your winrate though it could take you a while.
I found my remedy at last, and now my guiding star is shining; and when my present becomes my past, I realise, that every cloud has a silver lining!
Probably the same as before, maybe a little bit easier
I got to legend for 3 months in a row in 2018 with big spell mage then took a break and never got to legend again, just played for rank 5 to get the golden epic card. 4 days ago I gave it another shot for legend and picked galakrond rogue (which is one of the best decks right now), everytime I faced embigged druid I switched to holy wrath paladin (another deck that does really well in this meta but gets countered by rogue and token druid). Got from rank 7 to legend in 3 days and it felt pretty easy. I don't know the winrate because I don't use a deck tracker but I'm sure it was pretty high.
Any player reaching regularly rank 5 can reach legend. Many players wrongfully think it's a question of skill/talent. It's just a grind. Sure, a talented player will reach legend a little bit faster than a good player but he will have to grind like everybody else. I regularly reach rank 5 every month. Then, I fool around trying decks..much more fun and interesting.
Just reached legend last season for the very first time since the beta came out... Yup. Like you I'm an on and off player, but really only tried my hardest last two seasons. May I just say, all I encountered up at rank 2 and 1 were Druids (treant || embiggen) and Rogues (highlander). Barely any warriors, hunters, our warlocks. I fought one Paladin and a few shaman and priests.
Was it hard? Yes. Took me at least 150+ games. Did I tilt? Yes, lost 7 games in a row, won one, then lost 4 more. I was so mad, I took to Reddit to ask if that was normal. I had dropped from rank 1: 3 stars, back to rank 3 in minutes. It took me about a weekend to rank up that far.
Here's what I my learned from my experience:
- I used my own version of pirate warrior. It does extremely well against everyone and had a chance to beat everyone. Galak warrior seemed to be just too slow. If you invoke enough but never get him, you're likely dead. Don't invoke him enough, he's a dead card. Rogue can get away with it because they can draw so much and everything they do practically costs zero. You've seen it, they Galak into Togg, get the wand, play their entire hand for 0, play 0-cost Alex to get 2 more zero cost cards... Fun and definitely fair.
- the guys are right about sticking to one deck. You'll learn it intimately and know it's strengths and weaknesses against the other decks.
- as a card game it is ultimately luck based. You try to gimmie into your best starting hand, but sometimes just get crap. Or you have a great starting hand but draw poorly. When you know your deck well and your opponent's deck, you can feel when you lost simply because you had a bad hand. Or you lose because of insane luck. While incredibly frustrating, if you know the opponent only won because of a top deck or Alex Dragon, you know your play was good and deck is capable.
- if you see a pattern emerging in opponents don't be afraid to modify your deck. For example, when dealing with your treant deck, I found I was doing really well but kept falling down because of a big taunt sucking up all the damage. I removed Leroy and another underperforming card to get 2 spell breakers. Silence was indeed, golden and I started noticing more wins coming through in otherwise close matches were I wouldn't have closed it out previously.
- opponents at rank 5 onwards are all the elites. Assuming you all know each other's decks, and everyone pretty much has the same decks, and everyone is at equal playing skill, the only factor then separating all of you... is luck. The treant, embiggen and res-priest are super easy to pilot, in my opinion. From a pirate warrior's point of view, if you had the perfect cards and I had bad cards, it would've been impossible for me to win against all that value. For me to win against res-priest, I had to have perfect start and draw well, while they had to have a bad start, for me to win.
- perhaps try a more aggro deck. You'll get more games in, and either win fast, or lose fast. I'm married and work full time, so didn't have a lot of time to play. I made it to legend with only three days left of the season. Funnily enough, all the top decks are not Galak decks with the exception of the Rogue and Warlock. Pirate warrior only has Anchaar and Greenskin legendaries so is pretty cheap to craft. I didn't come up against a single pirate warrior deck if you don't like mirror matches. I liked pirate warrior because it was reactive and took some planning. Res-priest doing nothing for the first 5 turns is not my idea of fun.
- use a deck tracker. Watch back the replays to see if you could have done better. If your win ratio is hovering at 50%, (win one, lose one) it may be time to assess your deck. Annoyingly, new cards are coming out in the next few weeks and the meta does change. If you go from "I was beating that deck easily before" to "why can't I win a game against the seemingly same deck", that's an indication of things changing.
Good luck; it is hard, and tilting is a heartbreaker. I never knew if I could make it, but it is possible. I'm a bit of a completionist myself, and I saw hitting legend as "finishing Hearthstone". Don't worry about getting all the golden panels, that's just painful and I'm sure you have something else better to do with your life. Constantly winning at that high rank is quite challenging to get all those wins. Sometimes the game felt rigged; no joke. Several games in a row my opponents would get insane plays/top decks were I was incredulous about it; muttering: "no F*"!ing way, you cheater!". When that happens, yes, WHEN, just take a break.
It's been said a million times before but I always find that it bears repeating, and I have to often remind myself about it, but it's basically a pure numbers game. Unless you're really struggling with a deck or making big mistakes in your play, it literally is just about the number of games you play. As someone said earlier, 51% will get you there, it'll just take about 300 games from rank 5, where allike a 63% winrate will get you there in about 75.
Indeed. You really need time unless your winrate is pretty high.
51% is not high enough.. You will gain you 2 stars every 100 games you play (51 wins, 49 losses), so to get 25 stars you will need to play 1250 games. That’s about 40 games per day for a month. So I would say 51% does not get you to legend.. ;)
60% gives you 20 stars per 100 games, so you’ll still need to play 125 games, which is like 4 games per day in a month..
Even when you would have 70% you’ll still need to play 2 games per day for a month...
it depends on the time you have and the winrate...