Hearthstone 101: Beginners’ Legendary Card Crafting Guide

If you're just starting out in Hearthstone, then you'll know that arcane dust is very hard to come by in those initial months.

Updated 12-Dec-2014: 1. Changed Sea Giant reference to Faceless Manipulator in handlock description (this was an error). 2. Clarified that only the regular non-golden Elite Tauren Cheftain and Gelbin Mekkatorque can be disenchanted. 3. Added Sunwalker and Piloted Sky Golem as alternatives to Cairne Bloodhoof.

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Intended Audience

If you’re just starting out in Hearthstone, then you’ll know that arcane dust is very hard to come by in those initial months. If you’re an F2P player, your dust income is limited by how many times per day you can play arena, and your gold income for that will probably be sucked up by the campaign for a while. You’ll be wanting to concentrate on the foundation cards at first – those commons and rares that are fundamental to most decks. With some pretty angry Goblins and those tinkering Gnomes just around the corner, then if you are at the common/rare crafting stage, you’ll want to be checking out Ra-V’s excellent guide Crafting before GvG: Invest In The Future to get yourself on track.

But what if you’ve gathered up most of the staple cards you need? Where do you go from here?

There are plenty of legendaries to craft of course, and sweet mother of Hades, they cost a lot of dust! Therefore, it’s really important to select the most useful ones. In this guide I’ll speed through all of the classic (formerly ‘expert’) and GvG legendaries, present a recommended crafting order and why.

In this guide I will assume that players may be unfamiliar with certain cards – since the material is aimed at beginners – so I will give brief explanations of how each card is intended to be used.

Please remember that you do not need legendaries to rank up on ladder! Two of the most successful current decks – zoolock and aggro hunter – don’t use any legendary cards at all and many people have reached Legend rank using these. If you can’t win games at Hearthstone now, you are unlikely to be able to win when you have crafted legendaries either, so don’t expect these cards to solve all your problems! The majority of legendaries are quite situational and the main purpose of crafting them is to enable you to play a wider variety of decks, not to increase your win rate per se.

Acquiring arcane dust

Playing arena grants dust in some rewards, but also card packs which you can disenchant if needed. Once you have most of the commons and rares the dust value of each card pack will go up significantly.

You can also buy card packs with real money. As a very rough guide, if you disenchant everything in a pack, you will on average acquire 90-100 arcane dust per pack opened. A legendary card costs 1600 to craft.

In terms of drawing lucky, you have an approximately 1 in 20 chance (5%) to open a random legendary in a given card pack. Golden legendaries appear once per 200 packs (0.5%) on average.

You should disenchant cards that you own more than 2 of, or legendaries that you own more than 1 of. These cannot be used in any decks you create. Crafting Mode automatically notifies you with a glowing dust icon on the My Collection page if you have surplus duplicates that can be safely disenchanted.

Some people will differ on this, but in my opinion you should also disenchant any golden cards you own while you acquire the first few legendaries, in cases where you have 2 normal and 1+ golden, or 1 normal legendary and 1+ golden legendary. It may hurt, but ultimately we’re looking for function over form for the time being, and the golden cards are purely aesthetic improvements. Disenchanting 4 golden epics for example is enough to craft a single regular legendary, whereas you would have to disenchant 16 normal epics to accumulate the same amount of dust. Note that Crafting Mode will not notify you if you have these kinds of duplicates – regulars and golden cards are counted separately so you need to go through your collection to check for golden card surplus.

Finally, there are some cards that are safe to disenchant even if you don’t have duplicates, because they are not used in the meta and are unlikely to be used in a future meta. Cards which are almost completely useless but also epic or legendary – such as Bestial Wrath or Tinkmaster Overspark are good examples of cards you won’t lose any sleep over disenchanting, but there are many others. Experience playing many games on ladder will help you decide what is worth keeping and what isn’t.

Disclaimers

I write this article with Goblins vs Gnomes just a few days away. The value of these legendaries may go up or down although I have attempted to pick the most “stable” cards. I run briefly through the new GvG legendaries below but the analysis may be incorrect.

I have used deck lists from Hearthhead to provide usage statistics. Bear in mind that a deck database that anyone can contribute to will feature a lot of worthless decks, but also many good ones, so I hope these stats balance out. Skimming over the data, they appear to be reasonable usage estimates, but be aware that the stats include decks created before nerf patches (for example, Leeroy Jenkins) and old metas, which skew the stats for certain cards. Use caution when interpreting the data, as it can be misleading.

The crafting order below is approximate. Minor changes may be desired based on the decks you prefer to play.

What to look for in a legendary

In most (not all) cases, the card’s utility is more important than its body, so we are looking for cards with nice abilities. In the beginning when arcane dust is harder to come by, we would also like to select cards that can be used in multiple decks so they are not just sitting unused in your collection. Third, we want cards that will be relatively futureproof when new cards are released periodically. Finally, we want cards that have value in the current and likely near-to-mid term future meta. This last point isn’t quite the same as being futureproof; it means that as the meta adapts but no new cards are released, the crafted legendary should still have applicability.

Typical uses in current decks

We also consider the total crafting cost of oft-used decks and give a certain additional weighting to the crafting order of our legendaries:

  • Zoolock is the cheapest to craft at the current time, followed by the Aggro/Undertaker Hunter-style decks. Neither of these decks require any legendaries.
  • The next cheapest to craft is the Control Priest, where the primary cost comes in the form of two Cabal Shadow Priests and one Sylvanas Windrunner.
  • Miracle Rogue based on Gadgetzan Auctioneer and Preparation, Shaman and Druid are the next most expensive and all roughly equal in cost, although the Rogue may be slightly cheaper and the Druid slightly more expensive depending on the exact cards you use. Bloodmage Thalnos is commonly seen in these decks. Rogue decks benefit greatly from Edwin VanCleef.
  • Handlock is the next most expensive since you’ll be needing a veritable stack of epics including Mountain Giants, Molten Giants, perhaps Faceless Manipulator depending on your build, and of course my personal favourite card in the game (besides Knife Juggler), the inimitable Lord Jaraxxus.
  • Control Warrior is by far the most expensive to craft as you need a slew of legendaries, generally as a minimum including Grommash Hellscream and Ragnaros The Firelord, and most likely The Black Knight, Cairne Bloodhoof and others.

My recommendation is to build your decks from cheapest to most expensive. Zoolock and Hunter are perfectly viable to reach legend with at the present time, and it’s important to understand that you do not need legendaries to rank up. They will probably make it more fun, though!

Work through the sections below in order as you craft. Legendaries towards the top are more relevant to the current metagame and more futureproof overall.

Premium neutral legendaries

1. Sylvanas Windrunner

She might not be as sexy as Ragnaros, but Sylvanas has outrageous utility value. At 5/5 for a 6-drop, her body is slightly weak, but not only do we not care, we are actually happy about it, because we are playing this card almost entirely for its effect. Sylvanas is virtually guaranteed to 3-for-1 your opponent, and 2-for-1 her even if silenced.

Why 3-for-1 you say? First, your opponent has to remove Sylvanas from the board. Let’s assume she can do this with a single minion or spell. This costs them one card. One of their remaining minions is then removed from the board. This costs them one more card. Finally, the minion that was removed from their side of the board appears on yours. This gives you one additional card in card advantage, which is essentially the same as costing your opponent one card, since the difference in number of cards the two of you have on the board and in hand combined is increased by one in your favour.

In the silence scenario, the opponent must first silence Sylvanas, then kill it, costing two cards.

In situations where the opponent has no remaining minions, Sylvanas drops in utility to a 1-for-1, and with 5 health can often be removed with less mana expenditure from your opponent than it cost to cast. However, these instances are less common and Sylvanas usually represents amazing tempo gain.

Sylvanas can be used in almost any mid-range or control deck, but is too slow for aggro decks.

Sylvanas is used in 11% of all decks and is most often found in priest decks, with 19% of these employing her to do their bidding*.

2. Cairne Bloodhoof

In a nutshell, this card is a removal nightmare, and it’s not uncommon to see ladder players ignore it altogether and just attack to the face.

With 4 attack points, Cairne can’t be traded by most 4 or 5-drops, can’t be removed by Shadow Word: Pain or Shadow Word: Death, and when it is finally killed you get a Chillwind Yeti equivalent for free in the form of a Baine Bloodhoof. Superb! Cairne presents another excellent 2, 3 or even 4-for-1 opportunity.

Cairne can be used in pretty much any mid-range or control deck, we play it simply for the two bodies it produces at essentially an 8/10 for 6 mana – except it’s more annoying than that, because it has to be removed twice.

Cairne is used in 10.4% of all decks and is most often found in druid decks, with 23% of these featuring one*.

NOTE: There is a legendary in Goblins vs Gnomes which will compete for the 6-drop slot – Toshley; this can potentially be removed more easily but has higher stats (not counting the Baine Bloodhoof) and yields 2 Spare Parts, so it may be more applicable in certain metas. These two cards are not exactly comparable because Toshley is a little more situational, but in decks where space is tight Toshley may be preferred in a Spare Parts-heavy meta; Cairne is still an all-round great card and at the current time has very high crafting priority.

NOTE: If you are unable or unwilling to craft Cairne Bloodhoof, consider crafting Sunwalker (Classic) or Piloted Sky Golem (GvG) as a cheaper alternative (my personal preference of the two would be Piloted Sky Golem).

3. Bloodmage Thalnos / Ragnaros The Firelord

Which of these you craft largely depends on the type of decks you want to play; let’s look at them individually.

Bloodmage Thalnos

Card draw, increased spell damage and a deathrattle to proc Undertaker and various new GvG cards in a single 2 mana drop – what more could you ask for?

Unlike the previous two cards, Bloodmage is situational; however, this is one of few cards which has so many situational options that he retains relevance throughout the game. You can drop him on turn 2 to draw a card and proc Undertaker; you can drop him in the late game to draw a card; you can drop him in the mid or late game right before a sweeper (this is particularly great with Lightning Storm in shaman decks); you can use him to combo with spells in Rogue decks (Eviscerate, I’m looking at you). Bloodmage is therefore useful in any deck with some direct damage or AoE spells, and in minion heavy decks he’s great for card draw and as part of a meta that currently favours deathrattle-style decks.

Bloodmage is used in 14.5% of all decks and of the decks which use it, is most often found in Rogue (34%), Druid (22%), Mage (21%) and Shaman (18%) decks*.

Ragnaros The Firelord

It’s the love-hate relationship. You love to play him but you hate to play against him; he’s widely regarded as the most handsome Firelord on the block, introducing our good compatriot Rag!

Now far be it from me to suggest Rag is overrated – and I don’t think he is – but what I do think is that beginning players overrate the value of crafting him before anything else. I think this perception stems from the fact that people always remember when Rag finished them off, but they never remember being killed by a Sylvanas, Cairne or Bloodmage. In reality, the tempo gain of these three cards probably swung the game several turns before you were extinguished, whereas when Rag comes down, it’s often an obvious swift and decisive end.

Having said that, Rag is still well up there on the crafting priority list, but I want to emphasize that the difference between having 1600 and 3200 dust may be many weeks of grinding, so when I say he is high on the list doesn’t mean you should swap him around with the previous cards because “it’s only one legendary order difference”.

In terms of stats, Ragnaros is big and dumb but his key ability is the effect, and specifically that it triggers at the end of the same turn it is played. Judicious use of timing and attacks can allow you to somewhat control Rag’s RNG targets and the drawback of not being able to attack is offset primarily by the fact the first damage blast comes on the same turn he drops, and secondly from the fact he himself doesn’t take any damage when this happens, increasing the chance he will proc again.

To a certain degree, Rag is what we call a win-more card. If you’re ahead, Rag pushes you further ahead, but if you’re behind he’s actually not that useful in helping you to stabilize. Shrewd opponents will try to pump out lots of small tokens if they have no immediate answer for Rag, diluting his ability to inflict face damage, and that makes stabilizing when you’re behind harder. More often than not though, Rag is a finisher within 2-3 turns.

Ragnaros is used in 15% of all decks and is most often found in druid decks, with 25% of these sporting a Rag*.

4. The Black Knight

Sludge Belcher‘s a b… an annoyance. Wouldn’t it be great if we could remove him altogether and throw out a body at the same time? What if it was one of those 4-attack sweet spot minions that are almost as annoying to remove? Step right up, The Black Knight!

Sludge Belcher has become incredibly popular and for good reason, but whereas The Black Knight previously only had applicability in certain deck archetypes – and is unfortunately too expensive to use in aggro decks where taunt poses the biggest challenge – new threats are looming on the horizon. It looks like GvG will lead to increased use of taunt. Why?

First there are the early game drops like the beautifully named Annoy-o-tron. Enhance-o-mechano is destined to be popular due to its insane battlecry. Class-specific cards like Anodized Robo Cub and Coghammer may (or may not) see use. And as an aside, the Spare Part Rusty Horn will let you taunt up any minion for a single mana crystal.

Increased use of taunt leads to increased demand for answers to taunt, and The Black Knight is the only card in the entire game that can directly deal with a taunter of your choice.

It’s worth noting that GvG will introduce the Ogre mechanic which provides a new workaround for taunt: Ogre cards have a 50% chance to attack the wrong enemy. This means cards like Ogre Ninja and Dunemaul Shaman (plus others) have the potential to either kill a taunter, or kill something the taunter is protecting. As always, judicious timing will give you some control over the RNG element. These cards could lead to a slight decrease in use of The Black Knight in a certain limited range of decks, however The Black Knight remains the only card which can target a specific taunt minion and destroy it.

If you are planning to play in professional tournaments, The Black Knight goes up in value (at the time of writing) because of the current tournament meta.

The Black Knight is used in 8.5% of all decks and is most often found in druid decks, with 23% of these enjoying the knight’s services*.

Premium class legendaries

By this point, you have the basics covered and increased the utility of many of your decks. We now turn our attention to filling in the gaps in specific class decks to finish them off. The legendaries for Shaman, Miracle Rogue and Handlock below are the only ones you strictly need in these decks to complete them; this is not true of the control warrior, so while the order to craft these – or whether to craft them at all – depends on what types of decks you prefer to play and you can approach them in any order, I would strongly recommend leaving control warrior til last due to its exorbitant crafting cost. I have listed the decks in approximate order from cheapest to most expensive. Don’t forget to pay attention to the meta in case it has changed since I wrote this!

Shaman: Al’Akir The Windlord

This Shaman card is less threatening than it initially appears: once the initial 6 damage is dealt, you are often left with an 8-mana Sen’jin Shieldmasta with windfury. When you think about it, this is good value because a Fireball inflicts 6 damage for 4 mana – but you can’t split it among two targets – and Sen’jin Shieldmasta costs a further 4 mana without windfury.

Enough with the superficial analysis though; the bottom line is that Al’Akir wins games, it has the flexibility to be used as a finisher or as a defensive Sunwalker-style drop (albeit one that can be removed with Shadow Word: Pain) as you see fit, and makes a great addition to most shaman decks.

Al’Akir The Windlord is used in 23% of all shaman decks*.

Rogue: Edwin VanCleef

Edwin VanCleef is a 3 drop with a base stat of 2/2. Where this card comes into its own is its absolutely insane synergy with cheap rogue spells like Backstab, Eviscerate and Fan of Knives. Yet more synergy is afforded by Preparation which will let you cast 2 spells for free (itself and one other), and even The Coin adds to Edwin’s trigger count. Gadgetzan Auctioneer + Preparation + Conceal is a Big Thing in the Miracle Rogue meta at present, but if you don’t manage to pull off this combo, Edwin is your main man to call in for backup!

One of the great things about Edwin is that he scales up as the game wears on and remains relevant at any stage of the game. If you need him early on, you can play one other card first and get a 4/4 for 3 mana – but if you can hang onto him for the late game, you can easily drop an 8/8 bomb with a little planning.

Edwin VanCleef is used in 32% of all rogue decks*.

NOTE: Miracle Rogue looks set to be severely impacted by the Goblins vs Gnomes expansion. Defer crafting this card until the post-release meta has stabilized.

Warlock (Handlock): Lord Jaraxxus

YOU FACE JARAXXUS! EREDAR LORD OF THE BURNING L…. OOH LOOK A BUTTERFLY!!!!! *stares at butterfly* …. INNNNFEEERRRNNNOOOOOO!!!!!

Lord Jaraxxus is probably the ultimate bomb in the entire game of Hearthstone at the time of writing. Your life total is changed to 15, you get a 3/8 weapon and your 2-mana hero power generates a 6/6 Infernal token – every turn! When Lord Jaraxxus comes down, GG’s are usually quick to follow.

The primary application of Jaraxxus is in handlock whereby one would like to reduce one’s health to 10 or less – or may be forced to do so due to the very slow starting nature of handlock. At these low levels, the classic double Molten Giant + Sunfury Protector combo can be pulled off, followed up next turn by Lord Jaraxxus to recover some life. Note that casting Jaraxxus resets the internal damage taken by your hero, so once Jaraxxus is out you can no longer cast Molten Giants for the rest of the game. Therefore, handlock players usually try to get the giants out of their hand before playing Jaraxxus when possible.

Mr. Jaraxxus is used in 27% of all warlock decks AND HE IS VERY PLEASED ABOUT THAT*. INNNNFFFEERRRNNNOOOOOO!!!!!!!**

Warrior: Grommash Hellscream

WARNING: For the Shaman, Rogue and Handlock, the legendaries listed above are the only ones needed to complete their respective decks. At this time, control warrior decks also often rely on Baron Geddon and Alexstrasza (see below), the majority also include Ragnaros The Firelord and many also run Cairne Bloodhoof, The Black Knight and Ysera. I strongly recommend that you defer trying to build a control warrior deck until last.

Grommash is a typical control warrior finisher, where the charge lets you bust through unsuspecting taunt defences then combos nicely with the enrage to be poised to deal 10 damage next turn. He obviously works better if the opponent already has at least one minion on the board so that you can enrage him the same turn he drops, but even if that’s not the case, Grommash is a toned down version of handlock’s Jaraxxus in the sense that he gets the job done.

Mr. Hellscream is fighting the good fight in 40% of all warrior decks*.

Secondary neutral legendaries

These are neutral legendaries that are only generally useful in one or two deck types, as opposed to the premium neutral legendaries which can be used in most decks. They are listed in approximate recommended crafting order but please see the note on Ysera if you are making a control warrior.

Ysera

Primary applicability: Priest, Control warrior, Paladin, Druid

Ysera is a play style all of its own, because 1. it is probably the slowest card in the entire game, 2. it is one of the hardest cards to remove in the entire game, and 3. the Dream card mechanic is unique. I would also argue that no deck requires Ysera to be successful, but virtually any deck that has any kind of late game at all would benefit from it.

The card is incredibly slow for three reasons: unlike many legendaries, Ysera has no immediate effect on the board besides a minion that ultimately only has 4 attack points. Ysera is also slow because once you get a card from its effect, you then have to wait another turn to play it and then another turn to attack if its a minion. The third reason Ysera is slow is that the Dream cards you draw are random so you might not get a contextually useful draw from it straight away.

Ysera is pretty hard to get rid of, firstly because by this stage in the game you’ve probably used most of your removal already, and secondly because using minions to take out its titanic 12 health will be grossly inefficient more often than not.

Since this is a guide for beginners and many of you may have no idea what Dream cards are, give yourself a crash course by checking out the Hearthstone Wiki page on Dream cards. There are five Dream cards so you have a 1-in-5 chance of drawing a given card, and each one is essentially a more powerful and cheaper version of some standard card:

  • Laughing Sister is a pimped up Faerie Dragon
  • Emerald Drake is a Chillwind Yeti on crack
  • Nightmare is a beefed up Power Overwhelming
  • Dream is a free Sap
  • Ysera Awakens is an extreme Hellfire that leaves Ysera itself untouched

While all of the cards are useful, the one you’ll usually be rooting for is the devastating Ysera Awakens which is essentially a complete board wipe for everything except Ysera.

Ysera is chillin’ with my ladies in 7.2% of all decks and is most often found in priest (13.5%), druid (13%) and warrior (11%) decks*.

NOTE: If you are building a control warrior deck, I would posit that Ysera is the least important legendary for this archetype and should be crafted last.

Alexstrasza

Primary applicability: Control warrior, Mage

Alexstrasza is a great multi-purpose card. You can use it to instantly heal yourself to 15 life, or take your opponent down to 15. On top of that, it leaves behind a huge body. There is not much more to say about it as the use-case is fairly simple here – it’s a great catch-up card when you’re behind, and a win-more card when you’re ahead. Alexstrasza is best suited to control decks and can be found in various deck archetypes including control mage and handlock.

Alexstrasza is used in 6% of all decks but is most often found in control warrior decks where he features 18.75% of the time*.

Baron Geddon

Primary applicability: Control warrior

This is an oft-forgotten card and it tends to be one of those cards with a “soft taunt” effect. Its brutal AoE will compel your opponent to clear it at the earliest opportunity – and they probably will because 5 health for a 7-drop is pretty weak – but by then his ability will have proc’d once already which is the most you can often hope for.

You don’t really expect the Baron to survive for more than 1-2 turns, so the general policy is to drop him when you need to throw out a Consecration-style effect (preferably when your side of the board is clear – Baron Geddon is in many ways a catch-up card for when you’re behind), and if it hangs around one more turn for you to hit for 7 more damage, so much the better. I suspect this is why people don’t think about this card too much, because much like Bloodmage Thalnos it’s not sticky and people don’t remember when it won or lost a game for them or their opponent.

Warrior’s only real AoE is Brawl and to a certain extent Death’s Bite, so the addition of the Baron is a welcome one.

Baron Geddon is lurking in 2% of all decks, almost half of which are warrior decks where he features 10.5% of the time*. Usage in all other classes is split approximately evenly.

Low priority neutral legendaries

Legendary cards which are good but only useful in specific cases – do not craft these unless you have a specific need to, or you have already crafted everything else above. The cards are once again given in recommended crafting order.

Malygos

Primary applicability: Mage, Rogue, Druid, Priest

Another unique finisher, Malygos is all about using your cheap removal in the endgame to trash your opponent’s life total.

The synergies are a bit different depending on which hero you employ: Mage users can enjoy 11 damage per 4 mana with their Fireballs or a smooth 15 damage with Pyroblast. The problem is that you have to wait one turn after casting Malygos to play your removal, and that’s where the Druid’s Malygos + Moonfire combo comes in, allowing you to cast 6 or 12 damage on the same turn at no extra cost. Rogue users have a ton of options with cards like Eviscerate, but it’s also worth noting that Malygos also synergizes with Blade Flurry even though this might not be evident from the way the card text is written. The combination of Malygos and Rogue damage spells led to the rise of the so-called Malygod Rogue (Miracle Rogue is currently much more commonly seen on ladder; Malygos is now mostly used in Mage decks).

The priest doesn’t have direct damage besides Holy Smite so in the priest case we use Inner Fire to turn him into a 12-attack beasty (after possibly other cards that buff the health). This tactic can be used with Ysera as well.

Malygos decks have fallen out of favour of late and as such we consider this a low priority crafting option now. If the meta was different I would move this to the top of the Secondary neutral legendaries category above Ysera.

Malygos is used in 2.75% of all decks and is most commonly pimping mage’s ride in 6% of mage decks*.

Harrison Jones

Primary applicability: Tournament meta

You don’t see Acidic Swamp Ooze much in non-basic ladder decks, so why would we use its big brother Harrison Jones either? Well, in ranked play we probably wouldn’t, but in tournaments where you can ban one of your opponent’s decks, the ban mechanic changes the meta-game somewhat as it enables you to build specific counter-decks and then ban a hero that you may have trouble countering. Weapon-touting decks have grown in popularity with cards like the Shaman’s Doomhammer and Warrior’s Gorehowl cropping up quite often in tournaments, which makes Harrison not only the perfect counter but free card draw to boot. Harrison’s pièce-de-resistance, however, is when you drop it right after your handlock opponent plays Lord Jaraxxus – removing his 3/8 weapon and letting you draw 7-8 cards – sweet!

To repeat, at the current time you should generally only craft this card if you are planning to play in tournaments where it will be useful. It is not particularly useful in ladder at the moment; however this may change if Paladin becomes popular after the GvG release because Muster for Battle and Coghammer both provide good counter and card draw opportunity for Harrison Jones. Keep an eye on the meta!

Leeroy Jenkins

Regular players will know that the infamous Leeroy Jenkins was nerfed in September 2014, having its mana cost increased from 4 to 5. This prevented both the Leeroy Jenkins + double Shadowstep combo in miracle rogue decks (18 damage on turn 6), and to a lesser extent nerfed some popular Hunter and Warlock tactics too.

For those not familiar with the card, it is a classic big dumb finisher – a cheaper Reckless Rocketeer that does 1 more damage at the expense of giving your opponent a couple of tokens – and that’s exactly what it’s supposed to be, what else could you expect from Leeroy Jenkins? 🙂 (at least he has chicken) Note you will generally only want to play this on the turn that gives you lethal, because he is very easy to remove and you want to be able to negate the downside of the free tokens. If your opponent has no removal and no board presence at all, she can still remove your Leeroy with the tokens, so Leeroy will never get in more than one attack the vast majority of the time.

So is Leeroy still worth crafting now? I believe the answer is yes, but only as a low priority when you have pretty much everything else you want. He can be used in most decks although despite the nerf he is still most favoured in rogue decks, but at the current time he is no longer needed for any particular deck. If you are cruising around the internets looking for decks, make sure you check the date on the deck build as the nerf made some combos non-viable.

Premium class legendaries not currently popular

These legendaries are just as good as the Premium class legendaries earlier, except that they feature in classes that are currently weak or unpopular in the meta, therefore crafting them for laddering purposes is less relevant. This is subject to change as the meta changes.

Paladin: Tirion Fordring

A bigger Sunwalker that gives you 15 weapon damage after it dies. A great card to include in any paladin deck, and the divine shield synergizes well with various other paladin plays.

Tirian Fordring shields up 46% of all paladin decks*.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Druid: Cenarius

Druid’s theme is big minions and big taunts and Cenarius carries on this theme with its flexible multi-ability class legendary. Whether you go for the +2/+2 buff or the taunt satellites, Cenarius can swing the game’s tempo in one turn.

Cenarius is taunting you from 25% of all druid decks*.

Do I craft? Do I disenchant?

The following legendaries are reasonable to have and may find occasional use. Generally you do not need to craft these and if you do it should be with a specific deck or reason in mind. Generally it is also safe to disenchant any of these but you should only do it if you don’t have any worse cards to get rid of first. I have listed them in approximate order from best to worst (noting that I rate the best card in this list as worse than all of the cards above), so if you have more than one to get rid of, start at the bottom of the list. Taking the usage percentages with a pinch of salt is particularly important here since many of these cards used to be more popular.

Hogger can actually be quite decent but its body is a bit weak. He has about even use in all deck archetypes but may be slightly preferred by druid where some people replace Cenarius with it (used in 2.7% of all decks).

Hunter: King Krush – Hunter’s final bomb (as if it needs any more) is this Charge monster. When Webspinner chews out one of these, the game usually ends, and this is usually where you see it played nowadays. King Krush used to feature directly in many hunter decks but now the tendency is towards fast aggro with Undertaker, deathrattle minions and token producers like Snake Trap and Unleash The Hounds. Webspinner synergizes well with all of that and also gives the chance to draw King Krush for free, so the King’s inclusion in hunter decks has deteriorated dramatically (used in 15% of Hunter decks*).

Mage: Archmage Antonidas – this card’s ability looks menacing but it relies both on you having spells remaining in your hand, and another 4 mana to cast the Fireball that comes out. It’s too slow, and with 7 health at 7 mana it’s not too hard to remove in the late game either (used in 21.5% of mage decks*).

Deathwing is a double-edged sword. It’s a huge bomb, but you have to wait a turn to use it, and if your opponent has hard removal like Hex or Polymorph, then you just lost all your minions and your hand. If your opponent doesn’t have removal, you’ve probably won the game. As things stand now, this card is usually too slow and situational to be useful, and the recent proliferation of Sludge Belcher and other deathrattle minion spawns make Deathwing even weaker. The only really good time to play this is when your opponent is practically exhausted of cards in her deck, so you can feel safe that they won’t topdeck any removal (used in 1.4% of all decks*).

Illidan Stormrage used to find favour in warlock decks since it’s a Demon, but demon-based warlock decks are no longer popular in the meta and as such Illidan has fallen out of use. A couple of interesting new Demons are coming with GvG, so there is a small possibility that this card will find renewed use in the future (used in 1.9% of all decks*).

Priest: Prophet Velen – once again this card’s ability looks cool but has been found to be largely unnecessary, and too slow at 7 mana. Combos like Auchenai Soulpriest + Circle of Healing and Wild Pyromancer + Holy Nova are preferred, and can be executed twice in a game – you can only have one Prophet Velen in your deck (used in 17% of priest decks*).

Nat Pagle used to be a popular card draw engine but Naxxramas has brought us Undertaker and many deathrattle minions to compete for the 2-drop slots. The pre-Naxxramas card Loot Hoarder is a 2 drop with deathrattle that offers three advantages: 1. it synergizes with Undertaker to buff it, 2. unlike Nat Pagle, Loot Hoarder has a non-zero attack value which means it can trade up, and 3. Loot Hoarder is guaranteed to produce one card while Nat Pagle isn’t, so Loot Hoarder is the preferred option now (used in 4.85% of all decks*).

King Mukla is the biggest 3-drop minion in the game with a battlecry that isn’t too terrible in the lategame but really hurts in the early game – which is when you want to cast it. Naxxramas introduced Webspinner and this card can be output from that, and that is generally the only time you see it in constructed play now (used in 2.1% of all decks; used in 6% of all hunter decks*).

Onyxia produces Whelps that are often easily dealt with, which means you are paying 9 mana for an 8/8 – worse value than a War Golem. This is a win-more card; if you’re ahead, you win faster, but if you’re behind this won’t help you. The card would be much better if the Whelps had charge (used in 1.4% of all decks*).

The Beast is another big minion with a tricky deathrattle. As with King Mukla and King Krush, this legendary is generally only used when it pops out of Webspinner nowadays (used in 1% of all decks, 4.3% of Hunter decks*).

Disenchantable legendaries

Abandon ship! These bad boys are sitting on 400 dust each just waiting to be used for something better. This wouldn’t be a complete guide if I didn’t explain why they are bad though, so once again listing from least bad to worst, and without further ado…

Elite Tauren Chieftain – this is just a fun card that I personally would keep for collectors’ value; a straightforward 5/5 for 5 with a funny battlecry. The stats are actually quite ok and a couple of the Power Chords produced can even be handy, but there are more useful and reliable things to put in the 5 mana slot, so if you need the 400 dust and aren’t worried about collecting every card, you can go ahead and dust this one (Note: only the regular version can be disenchanted; the golden card is soulbound)

Gelbin Mekkatorque – pretty much the same story as the Elite Tauren Cheftain here, a straightforward 6/6 for 6 with a funny battlecry. Once again the stats are ok but even Boulderfist Ogre with its 6/7 for 6 outdoes this. As for the awesome inventions, this video should tell you everything you need to know! Again it’s a promo card with sentimental value so I would probably keep it (not planning to use it in any deck) but again if you need 400 dust, there is no reason not to disenchant this as you can’t use it effectively for anything (Note: only the regular version can be disenchanted; the golden card is soulbound)

Gruul is like a poor man’s Ragnaros The Firelord. You might look at it and think that one turn after being played it is a Rag that can attack and self-buffs and you’d be right; the problem is that most of Ragnaros’s advantage comes from the fact it delivers 8 points of damage on the turn it is played. Gruul doesn’t, and is therefore a sitting duck for one turn. Unlike Rag, Gruul also procs all of the Hunter’s traps.

Lorewalker Cho – you have no idea whether your opponent will cast a spell you want, and she gets a copy of everything you cast. Unless you can put it down right before your opponent’s Flamestrike, it’s almost all downside.

Millhouse Manastorm – if you love the idea of your opponent Pyroblasting you for free on turn 3, go ahead and craft this legendary, otherwise get rid of it; the 4/4 stats are great for a 2 drop and if you can drop it on turn 2 while assuming you are playing against an opponent who won’t keep expensive spells in her opening hand then it could be good, but overall the battlecry is just far too risky.

Captain Greenskin – this has poor stats for a 5-drop and a very weak battlecry – even for warrior where it is most often used – and Pirate decks aren’t a thing anymore. GvG is introducing a bunch of new Pirate cards in a seeming attempt to re-invigorate the archetype, but I remain unconvinced.

Old Murk-Eye – This is a promo card that is soulbound and therefore can’t be disenchanted, but just to summarize anyway: Murloc decks aren’t a thing anymore either, at least more or less; you do see them cropping up occasionally. The Murlocs rarely stay alive long enough for the ability on this 4-drop to have any effect though. I’d rather have Gnomish Inventor and draw a card than charge for 2 damage. Old Murk-Eye was primarily used in warlock decks but zoolock and handlock are the popular warlock paradigms now.

Nozdormu – honestly, sometimes when I’m playing on ladder I think all games should have this timer enabled by default. But this bizarre out-of-band card really serves no purpose in a turn-based strategy game. Nice idea though!

Tinkmaster Overspark used to be one of the most powerful cards in the entire game. Then Blizzard modified it so that you could no longer choose a target. The card then became worthless, and is in my opinion the worst legendary card in Hearthstone.

TLDR – What do I craft?

If you are out to build one specific deck archetype, use the table below. The left-to-right order is the average crafting cost for all the standard cards (including rares and epics not shown) for the deck archetype from cheapest to most expensive. This table only applies for the current meta (November 2014). For more general advice and non-deck-specific information, read the full article.

Warlock

(Zoolock)

Hunter Control

Priest

Shaman Rogue Warlock

(Handlock)

Control

Warrior

(none) (none) Sylvanas Windrunner Al’Akir The Windlord Edwin VanCleef Lord Jaraxxus Ragnaros The Firelord

Grommash Hellscream

Baron Geddon

Alexstrasza

Cairne Bloodhoof

The Black Knight

Goblins vs Gnomes Legendaries

It remains to be seen which GvG legendaries will be worth the dust investment, and where these will slot in with the above lists. For now, we keep things separate and make some educated guesses about the likely worth of these new cards. Each class has received a new legendary in addition to no less than 11 new neutrals! I have listed them in a very approximate crafting order that I would go for, from best to worst.

How important is it to start crafting these cards right now? If you’re a beginner, and while the new meta gets figured out, I recommend you start with the non-GvG legendaries, with the possible exception of the two or so best neutrals here. These cards are likely to trickle into play slowly rather than explode onto the scene, so there is time to adapt. Keep an eye on the meta – if it seems to be rife with particular GvG legendaries, go check them out on the web and consider crafting them. I will produce a new guide with the pre-GvG and post-GvG legendaries merged as soon as we know where we’re at!

Neutral Goblins vs Gnomes legendaries

foe-reaper-4000 – Amazing ability, great health, this card is a bomb in my opinion, and conveniently falls outside of Big Game Hunter range to boot!

Sneed’s Old Shredder – on paper this would seem like the best new legendary; two legendaries for the price of one, what’s not to like? It is worth considering that a lot of legendary cards aren’t actually that good though as we saw above. With all the new legendaries, the chance of drawing a Ragnaros (or any other specific legendary card) is just 1 in 63. On the other hand, it’s a card that replaces itself and removing two legendaries – even ones with no special abilities – is going to 2, 3, or 4-for-1 your opponent so this is up in Cairne Bloodhoof territory of tempo advantage gain.

Troggzor the Earthinator – First, for those of you who are old enough to remember Trogdor The Burninator, I give you a moment to stop laughing. This card is extremely harsh; a Burly Rockjaw Trogg is a 4-mana 3/5 which gains +2 attack every time your opponent casts a spell. Therefore if your opponent casts 2 spells while this is out, you end up with 2 Burly Rockjaw Troggs on board – one of them at 5/5 – plus the legendary itself. Together with the increase in mana cost of Gadgetzan Auctioneer from 5 to 6, this could ruin Miracle Rogue completely.

Mekgineer Thermaplugg – Leper Gnomes are annoying to deal with and in the late game where life total is a more valuable resource, this card could prove to be quite nasty.

Mimiron’s Head – this is going to be a bomb in Mech decks. V-07-TR-0N is a token legendary with charge and the new Mega-Windfury mechanic which allows 4 attacks per turn. I believe that Mimiron’s Head will be deadly in Mech decks – especially at a cost of just 5 mana, and the fact you have the ability to control when it procs.

Dr. Boom – a War Golem with a decent perk. This was one of the first cards revealed in GvG and I quite liked it at the time, but it does seem like it has been eclipsed by some other cards more worth the deck space.

Blingtron 3000 – the downside of giving your opponent a random weapon is pretty bad, however it can be combo’d nicely in Rogue decks with the new Sabotage, so I suspect this will see most use with Rogues.

Toshley – In decks based around Spare Parts, this will be great. In other decks, it’s a Boulderfist Ogre with one less attack. This is one of only five cards that can produce Spare Parts, which is worth noting – the others are Mechanical Yeti, Tinkertown Technician, Clockwork Gnome and the Druid-specific Mech-Bear-Cat. So perhaps Toshley will see most use in Druid decks.

Gazlowe – I’m not too keen on this one. There aren’t many 1-mana spells, and this card is pretty expensive for its stats. If your game is focused around casting lots of cheap spells, this is too slow. However, there is one class which has 1-mana spells: Paladin with its secrets. This class is the most under-used in ladder pre-GvG, and it will also be receiving boosts in the form of the great early game tempo card Muster for Battle, as well as Coghammer and a few other bits and pieces. So Gazlowe may turn out to be pretty decent in Paladin decks.

Mogor the Ogre – this is one for getting around Taunt and Stealth, so its use depends on the prevelance of these mechanics post-GvG, and it does look like taunt will be getting a boost, however I don’t think the difference will be substantial enough to justify this card.

Hemet Nesingwary – the battlecry is too specific and health too low. It’s worth noting that as well as Hunters, Druids will potentially be getting a Beast archetype as there are quite a few Beast-related cards coming to Druid in GvG. If Druid becomes popular, the value of this card will go up. Since it has low health, it is best viewed as a 5-mana hard removal spell.

Class-specific Goblins vs Gnomes legendaries

These are listed in alphabetical class order, not crafting order, as that depends on which classes you enjoy playing the most.

Druid: Malorne – Druid loves big minions and Malorne fits that theme nicely. The deathrattle is a minor but useful perk. We have to consider what else can go into the 7-drop slot and that is primarily Ancient of War and Ancient of Lore, so whether or not this gets used will mostly depend on what stats people prefer.

Hunter: Gahz’rilla – A shockingly overpowered legendary that is out of Big Game Hunter range when first cast and has a ton of health for a 7-drop. People don’t usually put King Krush in their Hunter decks directly – rather relying on Webspinner instead – but at only 1 more mana crystal than Savannah Highmane, this card looks set to be big.

Mage: Flame Leviathan – a War Golem with a pretty dumb effect. Since you have no idea when you’ll draw this and thus no control over when it will proc, I don’t like it very much. It is just as likely to hit in the early or late game, it’s not a reliable form of AoE and it could even cause you to suicide. On the other hand, the effect is free mana-wise, but then, it also alerts your opponent to the fact it’s in your hand. A real double-edged sword, but on the whole I think I would stay away from it.

Paladin: Bolvar Fordragon – this synergises well with Silver Hand Recruits but unless you are lucky enough to draw it early, it is going to lose relevance very quickly and end up sitting in your hand for most of the game. Having friendly minions die is also not what we are really looking for as an effect trigger. This is quite a disappointing legendary but on the other hand Paladin got so many good cards in GvG, it probably balances out. This card also synergises well with the new Muster for Battle card.

Priest: Vol’jin – this is an interesting one. By the time you get to cast it, there may well be high health minions on board and I quite enjoy the idea of switching health with a Sludge Belcher; it’s a shame that it is the health and not the attack that is modified, because that would have had great synergy with the Shadow Word cards. Overall I think this card will be quite decent, although it is likely to end up with 4 or 5 health which is a tad weak.

Rogue: Trade Prince Gallywix – an excellent card for Miracle Rogue, with the potentially significant downside that the spells of other classes tend to cost more than Rogue spells, so the amount you will be able to cast in one turn to proc Gadgetzan Auctioneer will be limited. It is also pretty unfortunate that this occupies the 6-drop slot which is the same as the new Gadgetzan cost. Overall though, this card seems like it will be good, and 8 health for a 6 drop is not to be sniffed at either.

Shaman: Neptulon – GvG has introduced a few new Murloc cards and it seems like they are tilting its use away from Warlock and into Shaman, which seems logical given Shaman’s affinity for small minions. This card also mitigates shaman’s biggest problem which is (arguably) poor card draw. For Murloc decks, this will be great.

Warlock: Mal’Ganis – notably occupying the same 9-drop slot as Lord Jaraxxus, this will only be useful in Demon decks of course. GvG introduces two new Demons – Floating Watcher and Mistress of Pain – both of which are pretty potent and synergize well with Dread Infernal, so we need to see if demonlock has a resurgence of popularity before crafting this. If it does, Illidan Stormrage will likely go up in value too.

Warrior: Iron Juggernaut – although the battlecry is unpredictable, I love the concept of this card and think of it as a generally fun inclusion. Of course, if the battlecry does trigger it’s going to be deadly, and so for 6 mana I expect to see this in those already legendary-stacked control warrior decks before too long!

Conclusion

Crafting legendaries is expensive, but with only 1 in 20 packs containing a legendary, 35 craftable legendaries in the Classic set and 20 more in GvG, the chance of you getting a specific legendary in a pack is a mere 1 in 700 for classic packs and 1 in 400 for GvG packs. Crafting is your best option.

Once you have crafted the premium neutral legendaries, craft only the legendaries you need and save your dust until you know what you will use the card for. This is especially important right now with GvG looming because the value of some legendaries is temporarily uncertain until the new meta stabilizes.

Good luck on your travels, and remember: if the light is burning you, you should probably sit further away from it.


Don’t miss Katy’s special Goblins vs Gnomes launch show on Tuesday 9th December at 18 CET / 17 UK / 12 EST. Katy will be opening 60 – that’s SIXTY – Goblins vs Gnomes packs live on air, and asking the viewers to guess how many Mech cards will be inside. The person who guesses the closest will win 15 Goblins vs Gnomes packs – but you have to be in the chat room and watching the stream to win! Details and rules on the web site. See you there!

Check www.katyhearthstone.com for Facebook, Twitter and YouTube links, and follow the Twitch channel to be notified when the show goes live.

www.katyhearthstone.com

 /djkaty

 /KatyHearthstone

/KatyHearthstone

 @KatyHearthstone

/+KatyHearthstoneShow


 

* figures from hearthhead.com. Includes all old decks, pre-patch and pre-nerf decks and previous metas, therefore the figures should not be taken too literally.

** subject to inferno availability


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