![]() Then, buff them up so they'd survive, and aggressively cycle through cards hoping to find a Questing Adventurer to pump up (or that Giant). Get out low-cost minions early to whittle down the enemy, including some Taunters to hide behind. ![]() Those cards were Knife Juggler and Defender of Argus. That's because I used some dust to craft two more neutral rare cards that I didn't own but knew would work well in this deck. So, after following my own deck building advice, my first build was: In addition, I had one sold Warlock rare - Syphon Soul - and the epic Molten Giant (which works well in Warlock decks). And it so happened my accumulated hoard of cards included lots of 1-mana Warlock minions. It obviously helps if you've got lots of cheap cards to play. These start out as rubbish 2/2 minions but they get an extra +1/+1 buff every time you play a card, so can quickly turn into dire threats. I looked through the rare and epic cards that I collected for something particularly good to try and build a deck around, and my eyes lit up at a pair of Questing Adventurers. And these are the results of my first five days in ranked play. But slavish Hearthstone addict that I've become, I wasn't afraid to tackle it. As you progress further, the streaks you need for bonuses get longer, and the number of stars in each rank gets higher. Once you've accumulated enough, you go up a rank.īut there's a catch: at level 20, you see, you start dropping stars with each loss. In ranked, you start at 25 and earn a star each time you win. After having opened 30 Hearthstone boosters - acquired through a mixture of in-game gold and a little real-world money - I decided it was probably time to stop shilly-shallying around in casual play and the Arena, and to head towards the big leagues of ranked play.
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