Fun deck to play really… but then, i love the priest 😉
I subbed the Dirty rats, stoneshapers and potions of madness though. Instead i put in 2 x Shadow Word: Horror, 1 x Eater of secrets , 2 x Stonehill defenders (judge still out on these) and 1 x pint-size potion.
I included the Horrors/pint-sized simply to have some board clear against Hunter/pirate warrior as to not get swamped before u can setup attack. The eater of secrets may become 2 instead, quite strong against Mage and hunter also.
Amaz actually just refined it today with
He decided to put in pint sizes potion to have more potion of madness targets
And play it as an aggro inner fire divine spirit deck
Turn 5-6 otk feelsbadman
I’m just wondering why there is no board clear or even removal at all in this deck. It’s either draw lyra + cheap spells and survive till you can grab something usefull from her. Imho not a very good or balanced deck.
If you’re relying on Lyra value to win with this deck, you’re doing it all wrong. It’s a combo deck, not midrange or control. You want to create a big sudden threat using health buffs and Inner Fire, which is a lot easier than it sounds thanks to Shadow Visions and Radiant Elemental. I win on turn 5 or 6 surprisingly often with this deck, and if it doesn’t go off early, Lyra and the Taunts can help you stall and set up another combo turn.
Thanks for the reply. I’ve tried playing this deck but maybe, as you said, I was doing it wrong. For me the biggest problem were fast decks that could snowball me with cheap minions before I could do anything substantial and the taunts didn’t help much in surviving.
I think Wild Pyro is better than priest of the feast in this deck. Lyra is your extension that PotF represent. It’s also a much better anti aggro card. Wild pyro bounces and healing can lead to board clears vs token druid, pirate warrior, ele shaman, midrange hunter. All PotF does in those match ups is extend the game a few turns until they Tundra Highmane you. Same with shell raiser, I think binding heal is better than that card, or maybe tar creeper. Idk, I think this deck hasn’t been solved yet, but playing with different variations, you can tell it is strong.
Miracle Rogue bases on a single turn when you can draw a lot of cards from your deck using Gadgetzan Auctioneer and casting spells. It’s a miracle turn. And now that theme also fits for Priest, because you can generate cards thanks to Lyra the Sunshard in similar way to rogue.
“Miracle” decks are also known for having massive burst potential. In Rogue, that means VanCleef or Leeroy with Cold Bloods and Eviscerates. In Priest, you buff a minion’s health, double it once or twice with Divine Spirit, then use Inner Fire to make it a monster.
Because nobody has given you the correct answer… miracle derives its name from an old Magic the Gather deck
That deck was nicknamed Miracle Gro and it utilized a card called Quirion Dryad. Quirion Dryad has the text: “Whenever you cast a white, blue, black or red spell, put a +1/+1 counter on Quirion Dryad.” In the context of Hearthstone this is the rough equivalent of “Whenever you play a card, gain +1/+1.” The deck utilized cheap/free card draw and counterspells to quickly “grow” the Quirion Dryad to massive stats. The deck got the Miracle Gro name from a plant fertilizer because of the speed that the Dryad grew from its initially measly 1/1 stats.
“Miracle” first entered hearthstone with Miracle Rogue, which originally relied upon Questing Adventurer and cheap/free spells and draw to buff QA much in the same way that Dryad was buffed.
People have now somewhat bastardized the term to apply to any hearthstone deck that can draw a ton of cards. Ordinarily this is done through Gagdetzan Auctioneer but, in this case, Lyra and Radiant Elementals allow you to produce a TON of spells when combo’ed together.
The “Sligh” deck was actually a very specific single deck famous in magic because it curved with cheap creatures to create a snowball of pressure, It was the first deck ever in the trading card history to apply the curve theory and it got its name sligh because one of the guys who played it was called that if I remember correctly, the creator was someone else.. well google it..
First time I See Lyra the Sunshard’s artwork so closely. Beautiful work! 🙂
Fun deck to play really… but then, i love the priest 😉
I subbed the Dirty rats, stoneshapers and potions of madness though. Instead i put in 2 x Shadow Word: Horror, 1 x Eater of secrets , 2 x Stonehill defenders (judge still out on these) and 1 x pint-size potion.
I included the Horrors/pint-sized simply to have some board clear against Hunter/pirate warrior as to not get swamped before u can setup attack. The eater of secrets may become 2 instead, quite strong against Mage and hunter also.
Y there are 2 Dirty Rats in this deck ?
Amaz actually just refined it today with
He decided to put in pint sizes potion to have more potion of madness targets
And play it as an aggro inner fire divine spirit deck
Turn 5-6 otk feelsbadman
Probably to counter the quest rogue. Dirty rat is also awesome against elemental shaman right now.
il pu la merde son deck
I’m using this but:
-1 Priest of the Feast
-1 Tol’Vir Stoneshaper
+2 Burning Pyromancer
I’m currently making the climb from 15 to 10 but it’s working well at the moment. Played about 20 matches so far.
I’m just wondering why there is no board clear or even removal at all in this deck. It’s either draw lyra + cheap spells and survive till you can grab something usefull from her. Imho not a very good or balanced deck.
If you’re relying on Lyra value to win with this deck, you’re doing it all wrong. It’s a combo deck, not midrange or control. You want to create a big sudden threat using health buffs and Inner Fire, which is a lot easier than it sounds thanks to Shadow Visions and Radiant Elemental. I win on turn 5 or 6 surprisingly often with this deck, and if it doesn’t go off early, Lyra and the Taunts can help you stall and set up another combo turn.
Thanks for the reply. I’ve tried playing this deck but maybe, as you said, I was doing it wrong. For me the biggest problem were fast decks that could snowball me with cheap minions before I could do anything substantial and the taunts didn’t help much in surviving.
I think Wild Pyro is better than priest of the feast in this deck. Lyra is your extension that PotF represent. It’s also a much better anti aggro card. Wild pyro bounces and healing can lead to board clears vs token druid, pirate warrior, ele shaman, midrange hunter. All PotF does in those match ups is extend the game a few turns until they Tundra Highmane you. Same with shell raiser, I think binding heal is better than that card, or maybe tar creeper. Idk, I think this deck hasn’t been solved yet, but playing with different variations, you can tell it is strong.
Awfull deck! No control at all, not good enough versus the actual meta…
lmao this isn’t control
What does the “miracle” thing means?
Lyra
Miracle Rogue bases on a single turn when you can draw a lot of cards from your deck using Gadgetzan Auctioneer and casting spells. It’s a miracle turn. And now that theme also fits for Priest, because you can generate cards thanks to Lyra the Sunshard in similar way to rogue.
“Miracle” decks are also known for having massive burst potential. In Rogue, that means VanCleef or Leeroy with Cold Bloods and Eviscerates. In Priest, you buff a minion’s health, double it once or twice with Divine Spirit, then use Inner Fire to make it a monster.
Because nobody has given you the correct answer… miracle derives its name from an old Magic the Gather deck
That deck was nicknamed Miracle Gro and it utilized a card called Quirion Dryad. Quirion Dryad has the text: “Whenever you cast a white, blue, black or red spell, put a +1/+1 counter on Quirion Dryad.” In the context of Hearthstone this is the rough equivalent of “Whenever you play a card, gain +1/+1.” The deck utilized cheap/free card draw and counterspells to quickly “grow” the Quirion Dryad to massive stats. The deck got the Miracle Gro name from a plant fertilizer because of the speed that the Dryad grew from its initially measly 1/1 stats.
“Miracle” first entered hearthstone with Miracle Rogue, which originally relied upon Questing Adventurer and cheap/free spells and draw to buff QA much in the same way that Dryad was buffed.
People have now somewhat bastardized the term to apply to any hearthstone deck that can draw a ton of cards. Ordinarily this is done through Gagdetzan Auctioneer but, in this case, Lyra and Radiant Elementals allow you to produce a TON of spells when combo’ed together.
Remember back when “face” decks were always red and were known as “Sligh” decks?
The “Sligh” deck was actually a very specific single deck famous in magic because it curved with cheap creatures to create a snowball of pressure, It was the first deck ever in the trading card history to apply the curve theory and it got its name sligh because one of the guys who played it was called that if I remember correctly, the creator was someone else.. well google it..
Lol. People think they know magic. Red aggro deck is called Red deck wins, not “sligh”
Dude, Sligh was played by Paul Sligh at first at the major tournament during Visions expansion circa 1995, RDW came like 5 years later…
Thanks, this was the answer I was looking for.
Finally the correct answer lol