![]() ![]() It’s important to remember to leverage your health total as a resource in the early game, and not to overreact to cards that aren’t actually threatening, even if that play would be mana efficient. It can be summed up as, “Stay positive and don’t die.” In other words, if you can withstand your opponent’s early waves of threats, you can stabilize, at which point the opponent is hopefully out of damage and concedes. In general, you’re either playing for attrition, denying your opponent’s from-hand win condition, or winning through overwhelming value combined with fatigue damage.Īttrition is your main anti-aggro game plan, and it’s the one that most people associate with Control Priest. The fancy new tech in this version of the list takes inspiration from Shadow Priest’s usage of Undying Allies to multiply undead, except instead of trying to snowball board presence, we use it to extract massive value from some of the slower undead like Plaguespreader and Undying Disciple, which eventually turns Xyrella, the Devout into a value bomb in the late game.īeing able to accurately identify your opponent’s game plan is key to this deck, because you end up adopting one of three fairly distinct play styles, and deciding which one is correct from the mulligan stage is crucial to be able to pilot this deck successfully. Control Priest is one of those decks that goes in and out of the meta, but given many of the matchups that you’re likely to face in this final meta of the Year of the Phoenix, this deck is well situated to be able to at least have a puncher’s chance against most of what you’re likely to see. ![]()
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