I’ve spend most of Rastakhan’s so far experimenting with different Even Paladin decks, and I have to say, I’m underwhelmed with the Corpsetaker package. Yes, the highrolls are impressive but it makes the deck bottom heavy and a little to dependent on whether you draw your Harpy or your Corpsetaker first.
Not only is this version much more versatile, without any one single point of failure and with more buffs thanks to the Bells, but the inclusion of 2 Loot Hoarders counteracts one of the main weaknesses of the more popular build: my hand simply doesn’t run dry.
I’ve spend most of Rastakhan’s so far experimenting with different Even Paladin decks, and I have to say, I’m underwhelmed with the Corpsetaker package. Yes, the highrolls are impressive but it makes the deck bottom heavy and a little to dependent on whether you draw your Harpy or your Corpsetaker first.
A variant that works a lot better for me is based on the list Day[9] has been playing for a while now, with the addition of Spirit of the Tiger (my take on it is here: https://www.hearthstonetopdecks.com/decks/even-buffadin-powered-by-tiger-spirit/).
Not only is this version much more versatile, without any one single point of failure and with more buffs thanks to the Bells, but the inclusion of 2 Loot Hoarders counteracts one of the main weaknesses of the more popular build: my hand simply doesn’t run dry.
agreed I have to say im surprised this variant can be so high legend, can never seem to stick a buff or close out a game w/o running out of resources