I'm new, but since there's no intro thread here (or none I can see), I'll get straight to it.
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I'm wondering if its wise to have a deck for all classes or simply a few decks from my favorite classes. On the whole, I don't see a point in having decks I don't like (that I can "powder" and make new cards with); but I feel it's unwise to be unprepared, too.
In general, its best to stick with one class until you get your basics straight. Level all your classes to 10 so that you get all the free cards, then pick what you are most comfortable with. You want something that reflects your own playstyle. Druid, Priest, and Warrior play it fairly slow. Hunter and Rogue tend towards faster games. Paladin, Shaman, and Warlock are very flexible and so they are somewhere in the middle. The meta right now is fairly open and there is no class that isn't viable.
I like having one deck for each class. It lets me be able to complete the daily regardless of what it is and if I go a couple of days without playing I can stack the dailies in my favor. If I get "Druid or Rogue Dominance" plus "Druid or Hunter Dominance" plus something like "Beat Down" or "Spell Master", I can complete all 3 quests with one set of wins if I have a Druid deck.
as noted its best to start with one class then progressively play more decks the more you play. That way you learn the basics and such. Its best to not Disenchant cards as it will make it easier and often you can regret DEing cards due to needing the card.
Sidenote if you need help any anything or such seeing as your a newer player feel free to add me on HS.
I'm new, but since there's no intro thread here (or none I can see), I'll get straight to it.
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I'm wondering if its wise to have a deck for all classes or simply a few decks from my favorite classes. On the whole, I don't see a point in having decks I don't like (that I can "powder" and make new cards with); but I feel it's unwise to be unprepared, too.
Thoughts?
Thanks for all the quick responses!
I was trying to think of whether I'd powdered any neutral cards before this...if I have, I'll have to stop.
(Just as a point of interest, I'm having a hard time deciding whether to put Warlock or Hunter on my profile...I like both.)
In general, its best to stick with one class until you get your basics straight.
Level all your classes to 10 so that you get all the free cards, then pick what you are most comfortable with.
You want something that reflects your own playstyle. Druid, Priest, and Warrior play it fairly slow. Hunter and Rogue tend towards faster games. Paladin, Shaman, and Warlock are very flexible and so they are somewhere in the middle.
The meta right now is fairly open and there is no class that isn't viable.
I like having one deck for each class. It lets me be able to complete the daily regardless of what it is and if I go a couple of days without playing I can stack the dailies in my favor. If I get "Druid or Rogue Dominance" plus "Druid or Hunter Dominance" plus something like "Beat Down" or "Spell Master", I can complete all 3 quests with one set of wins if I have a Druid deck.
Gaming Blog (WoW, Hearthstone, etc.) - http://honorscode.blogspot.com
when i started, i stick with rogue, warlock, druid.
but now i can play any classes with OK decks with bigger collection.
I got 6 decks and I am always able to complete the quest just look at the list of quests and play enough classes to cover all of them.
I don't play druid warrior and priest(cause they are control.. and I don't have even a single none naxx legendary which isn't garbage)
as noted its best to start with one class then progressively play more decks the more you play. That way you learn the basics and such. Its best to not Disenchant cards as it will make it easier and often you can regret DEing cards due to needing the card.
Sidenote if you need help any anything or such seeing as your a newer player feel free to add me on HS.
Thank you for all your opinions!
I used to be on another (non-HS-centric) board, but they weren't very nice people...and I only started playing HS after I left. (Typical, right?)