

Between Soul Fragments, board wipes, and unignorable threats, the king of late game reigns supreme in the later turns. It should come as absolutely no surprise to see Control Warlock on this list. With a few Murlocs in hand, a single turn can be enough to get back on top of a losing game.

Save your burst damage until the time is right, and remember that Illidari Inquisitor can hit the ground, get rid of Taunts, and still go face after your hero attacks.It’ll often be more beneficial to ignore your opponent’s minions and focus on setting up an early lethal. Your low-cost minions die quickly, but if you play your cards right they’ll fulfill their task before that. The Demon Hunter package has seen little variance since the class was first released.We’ll come back to him later in this article. You thought you were outside lethal range? No one’s outside lethal range. The amount of damage you can dish out from hand is often enough to surprise an unwary opponent.It’s quick, it’s easy to pilot, and it rests on the old reliables of the Demon Hunter class, meaning that it has good chances of remaining in the meta for a long time to come (or until Illidari Inquisitor gets hit with the ban hammer).If you’ve played Demon Hunter before, then you’re familiar with this deck. Between burst damage, sustain through lifesteal, and big screw-you minions, this deck does everything the class excels at. The new and improved Demon Hunter packs a solid punch and a host of ways to make it land where it hurts: the face. Find a seat, if you can, and check out the decks that are dominating the meta. Paladin still reigns supreme, but you’ll be surprised by some of the decks that have risen to fill the void Deck of Lunacy left behind. The recent meta shake-up has lead to a considerable amount of tier readjustment.

These are the best decks in the game right now.
