Hearthstone Senior Designer Max McCall Comments on the Current State of Shaman

Shaman has been dominating the meta-game for a while now, and it’s no surprise that some players have become tired of facing the class. Max McCall, Senior Designer at Blizzard, commented on the state of the class on the official Hearthstone forums.

Update

Max McCall has followed up his statements on the Shaman class.

Updated Statement

I chose Reno Warlock for my example because it performs substantially better than Dragon Priest against the midrange Shaman variants, and those midrange variants outperform aggro Shaman against the field and are favored against aggro Shaman specifically to boot.

Perhaps I should have called out Dragon Priest as a Shaman counter instead of Reno Warlock, since Dragon Priest is slightly stronger than Reno Warlock against specifically aggro Shaman, and aggro Shaman is the most popular variant right now. Regardless, Reno Warlock is a marginal favorite – by half a point, but still a favorite – against aggro Shaman. But against slower Shaman decks, you’d rather be playing Reno Warlock than Dragon Priest.

Vicious Syndicate does good work, but they obviously don’t have as much data as we do. We look at every game played among the top 1.3% of players, in all regions.* That roughly corresponds to rank 4 and up. We know every card in every deck and sort those decks into the archetypes you see on the ladder. Our BI team is extremely sophisticated, and we can drill extremely deep into small variants of those archetypes and see how small deck tweaks impact certain matchups.

Many conclusions can be drawn from the same data, but we are extremely confident in our assertions about specific matchups when the data is aggregated in this way. I do note, however, that at nosebleed Legend, some individuals do substantially overperform. This was most obvious when Patron was very strong. Skilled Patron players at or near rank 1 Legend were winning almost 80% of their games after a couple hundred games, while the mere mortals at medium Legend ranks only won about half their Patron games. So, yes, some players win a lot in matchups that are ostensibly unfavorable – but in general, when we describe a matchup, we’re talking about the high-level metagame at large.

*Yes, we have looked at lower ranks as well. The numbers were virtually the same. It’s computationally expensive to look at every game at every level, even with sampling, but we do recheck every so often to ensure that the high level metagame is still representative of lower level play.

[Source]

First Statement

We are keeping an eye on Shaman decks and we’ll see how they develop. We say that a lot. Here is what it means:

Okay, so: there are a few different kinds of Shaman decks:

– There are aggressive Shaman decks that play a Pirate package and no Jade cards
– There are slightly slower Shaman decks that play Pirates and Jade cards
– And there are even slower Shaman decks that play the Jade cards but no Pirates

All of those decks are strong, but they are all weak against Dragon decks (like Priest and Warrior) and Reno decks. If you’re tired of losing to Shamans, play Reno Warlock. In some ways, that is fine: Shamans are popular, but there are strategies that are good against them.

In other ways, it is less fine. Collectively, Shamans are popular; you play against a Shaman about one game in four. Now, the reason that a ‘balanced’ metagame is desirable isn’t because ‘balanced’ metagames don’t have dominant strategies. They are desirable because you play against different classes more frequently, which means you have a wider variety in the types of Hearthstone games that you play. Playing Shaman isn’t a dominant strategy – again, they lose to plenty of decks – but it is still boring to play against the same class over and over again.

And even though the Shaman decks have distinct differences, those differences are small. If you played against Warlocks one game in four, but half of your Warlock opponents were playing slow Reno control decks and the other half were playing aggressive minion decks, those games would feel very different from one another. On the other hand, when you lose to Tunnel Trogg, Totem Golem, Feral Spirit three times in a row, it doesn’t matter if some of those Shamans had a Pirate package or if one of them had Jade cards. Your games still felt very homogenous and weren’t that fun especially the third time around.

The point I am trying to make is ‘classes can be problematic even though they do not win too often.’ Shamans don’t win too often. Right now, they are more popular than we’d like. If they are too popular for too long, we will do something about it, as we did when we nerfed them a couple of months ago. However, it takes time to assess whether or not a class will cause the game to feel too homogenous for too long. On release, Mech Mage and recently Pirate Warrior were more popular than Shamans have ever been – but only for a few weeks, then people discovered alternative strategies and the decks became less popular. Because we know that Shamans have weaknesses, we hope that those strategies will become more popular and drive down Shaman popularity a bit so that you play against more classes more often.

We are going to keep evaluating Shaman popularity in the near future, and if we don’t like what we see, we will change something about the metagame. Perhaps we will change a card. Perhaps we will see Shaman popularity fall and not have to step in at all. Perhaps we will wait to introduce a new set and see if that creates the metagame change we want. Either way, it is a thing we are actively concerned about and paying attention to.

[Source]

Leave a Reply

12 Comments

  1. Doardi.G
    January 26, 2017 at 11:13 am

    The fact is that we don’t want to play decks blizzard build us, like pirates or mech.
    We want the possibility to build new decks. Like mtg do.

    The most important thing is the time.
    Aggro shaman allows me to play more game than renolock in the same time length.
    This is the problem.

    And plz, stop with stupid random effects, i understand that you would give to unskilled players the possibility to win, but c’mon, stop thinking about make money Blizzy.

  2. Zkool47
    January 20, 2017 at 11:33 am

    I hope Small Time Buccaneer gets nerfed or else Aggro Shaman will still exist after the rotation. I’m tired of facing this Aggro Shaman over and over again.

  3. Tracy
    January 19, 2017 at 7:43 pm

    It’s nice to know that they base decisions on ” top 1.3% of players, in all regions.” Not the players in the other 98.7%. Holds true that the pro’s have more effect on the game than the majority of players.

    • Kohtupora
      January 20, 2017 at 3:13 am

      There are other players too than pros in the 1,3%. Meaning there are just players that are Good at the game. And if you read the whole thing you would’ve noticed they said the results are virtually the same at lower ranks (98,7%) but it would be over expensive to have so much of a bigger size to collect the data from. They still do recheck that high level play ranks aren’t far too off from lower ranks.

    • Zimgol
      January 20, 2017 at 8:50 am

      As it should be. If Blizzard is interested in balance then I think it is wise to focus more on the group of players that have all the cards and pushing all the edges they can find to come out on top. I’m not a pro but it is a given in most games that the “pros” would take the spotlight many times though a close second are incoming players that grow the game and the overall experience for all who play.

  4. d3adrav3n777
    January 19, 2017 at 1:45 am

    The rreason shaman is good is trogg and golem. when they leave shaman will suck.

  5. Hi2ukindsir
    January 18, 2017 at 10:41 am

    Please… in what world do Jade lists lose to Reno decks? Playing probably 20+ matches against reno decks with Jade Rogue or Jade Shaman, and I’ve lost 2 (both were warlock due to a combo turn). They cant wipe the board enough to keep up with your Jade Golems coming in as 6/7/8+.

    As Jade Rogue, I had issues with Pirate warrior and Dragon Priest.

    After switching to Jade Shaman, The amount of board clear and heal keeps me alive vs most Pirate matches.

    Dragon priest is a problem. If they curve out perfectly then its a rough game, but if not It generally goes really long game, and I fatigue them out. I’d still favor Priest in this matchup though.

    • Nick
      January 18, 2017 at 2:57 pm

      Ehhh, with my Jade Aggro Rogue I lose to most Reno decks. They just hold me at bay long enough to Ice block into Reno heal and then it’s GG. I don’t play Shaman so I can’t say much their but my Jade Druid generally beats Reno but loses to Pirate/Aggro if they draw a strong early and kill me post ramp up. I’d still like something to change the pace of deck building in the meta. Everything is Dragon, Jade, Reno, Pirate or a combination of these and it just doesn’t feel very diverse at the moment.

      • brian
        January 18, 2017 at 9:23 pm

        this max guy is funny. how can he say shaman doesnt win too often when it has the most decent curve or off curve turn rates.

        • brian
          January 18, 2017 at 9:25 pm

          another thing ; nobodys gonna stop playing shaman because its one of the two easy, top level decks to play. the game devs never cared about balance.

          • CD001
            January 20, 2017 at 5:50 am

            Even when Tunnel Trogg, Totem Golem and Thunder Bluff Valiant all go out of rotation in a couple of months? We’ll see – we may just end up with a tonne of Jade Shamans instead.

        • chris
          January 27, 2017 at 11:02 am

          Because has actual data instead of completely irrelevant statements like “shamans curve out good”.