

Perhaps the new expansion will include some mill support, and Naturalize would have been too scary with that, but that is unlikely given how little support mill has had in Hearthstone over the years as an archetype.

Naturalize has also been a key piece in every attempt to build Mill Druid already before King Togwaggle, but those hopes have been buried ever since Coldlight Oracle was rotated out of Standard. However, King Togwaggle is rotating out of Standard anyway, so all of those decks are dead no matter what happens with Naturalize. Spreading Plague changed that, and for a time Druid was able to deal with a wide variety of threats, but this is already changing in the rotation with Spreading Plague and Lesser Jasper Spellstone on their way out of Standard.Ĭurrently, Naturalize plays a key role in various King Togwaggle decks, whether with Hakkar, the Soulflayer or with Azalina Soulthief. Naturalize is a piece of hard removal for Druid, but so was Mulch: Druid’s main issue used to be dealing with wide boards, not with individual big minions. It is a powerful card, but it has a significant drawback attached to it, although one that can be turned into an advantage with specific choices or in specific decks. Naturalize was the problem all along? If you were to tell that to Hearthstone players from the past, they would wonder why, because the card has been hardly playable most of the time. Of course, Blizzard has had ample time to learn from that era, so maybe this time the reasons will become apparent faster. Hopefully, the next expansion will give Warlock suitable substitutes, but history does not support this hope: Blade Flurry nerf, for example, was only truly justified by the introduction of Kingsbane three expansions later. Overall, the rotation of Doomguard is hitting a class that is already set to struggle after the Standard rotation, taking away both one of the best budget cards and one of the key synergy pieces from a potential post-rotation Warlock archetype. Soulwarden is one of the most prominent current Warlock cards to build around after the rotation – which is set to hit Warlock hard – but without Doomguard, it is hard to see what the right synergy cards could be. It is already difficult to find Discard cards that are good enough to play, and a midrange style with Doomguard and Soulwarden has been somewhat viable.

The main casualty of the Doomguard rotation may in fact be Warlock decks that want to make use of the Discard mechanic. Rotating Doomguard to Hall of Fame does nothing compared to all those losses. If anything, the rotation hurts budget Zoo players, for whom Doomguard is the most direct replacement for the expensive Legendary Leeroy Jenkins.ĭoomguard is obviously present in Cube Warlock, which is still a dominant force, but Cube Warlock will die in the Standard rotation: Skull of the Man'ari, Possessed Lackey, Carnivorous Cube, and Bloodreaver Gul'dan are all rotating out, so the deck has no means left to summon and multiply Doomguards anyway. Doomguard has been a Zoo Warlock staple, but most current Zoo builds opt to go for Leeroy Jenkins and two Despicable Dreadlords, skipping Doomguard entirely. The current era is not the most dominant era of Doomguard, though. It is nonetheless a price many players have been willing to pay, making it one of the only Discard mechanic cards that have been strong enough to see play without synergy support: the only other ones being Soulfire, Deathwing, and Cataclysm (only in Mecha'thun combo decks). It is immensely powerful, a 5/7 minion with Charge for mere five mana, but the added cost of discarding two cards is a hefty price to pay. Doomguardĭoomguard has been a Warlock staple throughout the years. In this article, we’ll examine the current use of these cards and how their rotation out of Standard format affects the decks they are used in. The Year of the Dragon Hall of Fame class was unexpected and is bound to shape the Hearthstone Standard format meta more than any previous Hall of Fame rotation – mostly because the key Legendary cards from The Witchwood expansion, Genn Greymane and Baku the Mooneater, will go on an early retirement alongside all of the Even and Odd support cards.įurthermore, three solid Classic set cards are on their way to Hall of Fame: Doomguard, Naturalize, and Divine Favor.

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