The Aggro Water Rogue deck list that includes Finja, the Flying Star has grown heavily in popularity recently. Our Aggro Rogue guide will help you pilot this new deck by teaching you mulligans, strategy, and general tips on how to succeed!

Introduction

In a popular game like Hearthstone, most of the time the meta gets “solved” really quickly. A month after the expansion we already know which decks are the best and we can safely assume what we will play against for the next 3 months or so. But surprises happen. Every expansion has some “sleeper” cards which power gets discovered pretty late into the expansion.

When it comes to Mean Streets of Gadgetzan, Finja, the Flying Star is that sleeper card. It wasn’t really rated highly (in any deck besides Anyfin Paladin), because no one expected to see a lot of Murlocs in the meta. However, after a lot of experimenting, it turned out that Finja is strong enough to put other Murlocs into the deck, even though you normally wouldn’t play them. And so, besides the standard “Pirate” package that tons of the decks have been running, more and more lists have started including “Finja” or “Murloc” package. Decks that have used both are known as “Water” decks (probably because both Pirates and Murlocs are water-themed, don’t ask me). Probably the most successful of those decks is Aggro “Water” Rogue that has been gaining quite a lot of popularity lately.

The deck looks odd, when I first looked at it I thought that it can’t possibly win games. But I was wrong. It can win the games, and more than that – if you learn how to play it properly it’s one of the best decks in the current meta.

The list I’m using for the guide was created by Freakeh, based on the original list by Dwayna. However, since the decks are still pretty fresh, people are experimenting with tons of different builds. I’m going to write about the more tested and “stable” one, because new ones are probably developed as you read this (I know that Dwayna is constantly testing new stuff on his streams). If the build changes heavily, I will update this guide.

Aggro Rogue Mulligan Strategy & Guide

I’ll divide the mulligan section into two – against fast decks and against slow decks. Fast decks are generally the Aggro decks (e.g. Aggro Shaman) or high tempo Midrange decks (e.g. Dragon Warrior). Slow decks are slower Midrange and Control decks.

Vs Fast Decks

Higher Priority (keep every time):

Backstab – 2 damage for 0 mana? One of the best tempo cards in the game and tempo is exactly what you need against fast decks. You can also kill 3 health minions on turn 1 (like Tunnel Trogg ) if you draw a Pirate and get Patches.

– 2 damage for 0 mana? One of the best tempo cards in the game and tempo is exactly what you need against fast decks. You can also kill 3 health minions on turn 1 (like ) if you draw a Pirate and get Patches. Swashburglar & Southsea Deckhand – Turn 1 Pirates are good, because you want to get Patches out of your deck as soon as possible so you won’t draw it.

& – Turn 1 Pirates are good, because you want to get Patches out of your deck as soon as possible so you won’t draw it. Argent Squire – Another 1-drop, it’s best to have a 1-drop against fast decks, so you generally want to keep it. Divine Shield might come handy when it comes to early game trading – it’s great against other 1 health minions.

– Another 1-drop, it’s best to have a 1-drop against fast decks, so you generally want to keep it. Divine Shield might come handy when it comes to early game trading – it’s great against other 1 health minions. Bluegill Warrior – Even though you don’t mind using your Hero Power on turn 2, having Bluegill is also good – this way you can often trade into something your opponent has played.

– Even though you don’t mind using your Hero Power on turn 2, having Bluegill is also good – this way you can often trade into something your opponent has played. Finja, the Flying Star – I know that keeping it looks weird, but you want to keep Finja every time. It’s a little bit slow, but it provides an insane tempo swing. After all, you play your other Murlocs to “activate” Finja and drawing her increases your odds to win heavily.

Lower Priority (keep only if certain conditions are met):

SI:7 Agent & Edwin VanCleef – With an activator – Coin or Backstab (or even better both when it comes to VanCleef). Great when you activate combo, bad if you don’t.

& – With an activator – Coin or Backstab (or even better both when it comes to VanCleef). Great when you activate combo, bad if you don’t. Other 3-drops: Shaku, the Collector, Jungle Panther or Argent Horserider – If you already have a 1-drop. Having a 1-drop or at least a Backstab. Since you often skip t2, you can’t really afford to skip t1 against fast decks. Having a 3-drop is good, but getting a 1-drop has a higher priority.

Vs Slow Decks

Higher Priority (keep every time):

1-drops – Similarly to Mulligan vs Aggro, you want to open up with a 1-drop. I’d say that the priority goes like this: Swashburglar > Southsea Deckhand > Argent Squire .

> > . Edwin VanCleef – Unlike the matchup against Aggro, you should always keep Edwin vs Control. You don’t necessarily aim to drop him right away on turn 2/3 – you can quite consistently make him a 6/6 in the mid game even without Coin and that’s a great tempo push.

– Unlike the matchup against Aggro, you should always keep Edwin vs Control. You don’t necessarily aim to drop him right away on turn 2/3 – you can quite consistently make him a 6/6 in the mid game even without Coin and that’s a great tempo push. Shaku, the Collector – Early Shaku is great against slow decks, because it gives you a very needed 3-drop + extra value once you attack + it might disrupt whatever your opponent wants to do, because he will just need to answer the Shaku.

– Early Shaku is great against slow decks, because it gives you a very needed 3-drop + extra value once you attack + it might disrupt whatever your opponent wants to do, because he will just need to answer the Shaku. Jungle Panther – Even though you lose some The Curator value by keeping it, it’s still a good 3-drop to have. Your opponent can’t really answer it on turn 3 and guaranteed 4 damage (to trade or to hit face) is really great.

– Even though you lose some value by keeping it, it’s still a good 3-drop to have. Your opponent can’t really answer it on turn 3 and guaranteed 4 damage (to trade or to hit face) is really great. Finja, the Flying Star – Absolutely the highest mulligan priority. Finja swing is often the way you win games vs Control, the card can win the game by itself.

Lower Priority (keep only if certain conditions are met):

Backstab – If you have a 1-drop already or if you have a combo card (e.g. SI:7) to play with it. You don’t need it that much vs Control, because they often don’t drop early minions, but it’s worth it as a combo activator.

– If you have a 1-drop already or if you have a combo card (e.g. SI:7) to play with it. You don’t need it that much vs Control, because they often don’t drop early minions, but it’s worth it as a combo activator. Cold Blood – With Argent Squire . Playing Cold Blood on some 1 health 1-drop is not great, because it will usually just be pinged and killed. However, playing it on Argent Squire is much safer – you will most likely get 2 hits value, as the opponent would need to ping the Divine Shield first.

– With . Playing Cold Blood on some 1 health 1-drop is not great, because it will usually just be pinged and killed. However, playing it on Argent Squire is much safer – you will most likely get 2 hits value, as the opponent would need to ping the Divine Shield first. Naga Corsair – With a smooth curve. 1-drop into Hero Power into 3-drop into Naga Corsair is one of the best curves you can have – especially if you didn’t attack with your dagger before (you end up getting full Naga Corsair value then).

Aggro Rogue Play Strategy

Even though it’s an Aggro deck, it’s really tricky to play as compared to the other Aggro decks. It’s not a classic “face rush” deck where your main goal is to kill your opponent as fast as possible. The deck has quite low early game tempo, besides some rare cases you can’t really drop the enemy down to 10 health on turn 4. The deck’s main strength are big tempo swings on certain turns. Combo cards are generally weak if you play them without combo, but they can be incredibly powerful in certain cases. Same goes for Finja – a turn after playing Finja is an insane swing. You can turn the whole game around with just that one card. Other “tempo swings” include a big Edwin VanCleef or Dark Iron Skulker.

The deck is slower, which means that it doesn’t run out of steam that quickly. You have multiple cards generating extra value – 2x Swashburglar, Shaku, the Collector and The Curator. Sometimes you can afford to play a slower game and still win with the right tempo swing. I had games vs Dragon Priest which I took past turn 10 and still won after getting the Finja value.

Vs Aggro

Your strategy against other Aggro decks is rather simple. First of all, you try to answer everything they play. Don’t try to engage in a face rush (unless you have extremely aggressive hand with let’s say 2x Cold Blood) because most of the time you’re going to lose. You have multiple tools to kill opponent’s minions without taking damage yourself – Backstab, Eviscerate, Charge minions (Deckhand, Bluegill Warrior, Argent Horserider). You want to utilize them if possible. Your Hero Power is also great in those matchups. Even though you take extra damage, with one activation you can often take two small minions. Taking some damage early to establish the board control is fine. But later, if you can, try to not use your face to tank more damage.

At one point, you want to make a tempo swing and start being the aggressor yourself. It really depends on the game. It can happen when your opponent had a slower turn (e.g. he didn’t develop any minions) while you have some board presence, after a big Edwin or especially after the Finja turn. With your usual post-Finja board you can usually threaten 2 turns lethal, so you want to do exactly that – put your opponent on the clock. You generally want to keep your Cold Bloods for those tempo swings – you want to put your opponent in an awkward spot. Using it early to go face will just make him trade his minion and get 2 for 1. But if you use your Cold Blood when you have board control already, he will often have to a) face tank it with his weapon b) use some burn spell to kill it or c) he won’t even have a way to deal with it.

Try to make your “tempo swing” as fast as possible. If your opponent gets a, for example, slow turn 4, try to get advantage and develop as much stuff as possible. You should win the late game against Aggro, but the problem is getting there. This deck is amazing at pushing an advantage, so once you get even a slight opening, try to use it.

Vs Control

In games vs Control, you’re the aggressor 100% of time. But it doesn’t mean that you have to hurry up. Against Control, you might take a slightly slower game and still win. Games vs Aggro are pretty straightforward, but those vs Control can be incredibly difficult. Most important thing is resource management. Most of the Aggro decks run tons of burn damage/weapons that make killing opponent after early aggression much easier. In case of this deck, it’s a little bit harder. It’s much more board-centric than other Aggro decks, you really need your board to deal the damage. So you want to use your minions as efficiently as possible and try to protect them.

First of all, let’s forget about “taking it slow” for a bit. There are some matches, some opening hands where you really want to rush things down. One of those cases is getting an early Argent Squire + Cold Blood. It’s an amazing combination, because it allows you to start pushing some serious damage as soon as turn 2. And before your opponent will deal with the Squire, it’s pretty likely that you will have more minions to attack with. If you get a really aggressive opening hand, you can try to push it and win the game fast. If that’s the case, you can go for the highest tempo moves – e.g. dropping turn 4 Naga Corsair without a weapon equipped at all, just for the 5/4 body. However, don’t try to go for this plan with a slower hand, because most of the time it will fail. Slower decks are well-equipped to fight against the early aggression and if you’re not aggressive enough, they will first stabilize and then win, because you were using your cards inefficiently to get the highest early tempo.

So, let’s assume that you’re not going for the face rush plan (if you do, there is not much more I can really tell you – just hit face and pray that your opponent won’t have the right answers). Overall, taking face damage is not a problem when playing this deck. Until you’re really low, you can easily swing your dagger at minions. That is going to help you with building a tempo advantage, 2 pings per 2 mana is quite nice for the Hero Power if you don’t count the extra damage.

The “big tempo swings” are even more important against Control. You want to try to put your opponent in an awkward situation if possible. For example, if you put a Cold Blood on a small minion and play a big Edwin VanCleef on the same turn. Those actions alone might have been countered quite easily, but when combined, your opponent might not have a way to both clear a buffed minion and big VanCleef. If he can’t, now you have an amazing tempo advantage – you can develop next minion and once again he won’t likely be able to clear both. This way you push for some serious damage each turn while your opponent tries to deal with whatever you play.

One of the absolutely best cards against Control is, obviously, Finja, the Flying Star. While it makes the turn you play it really slow, you get everything back next turn. I just love pulling out 2x Murloc Warleader, because it gives you most stats on the board. And that’s amazing about Finja turns is that you also have full mana to develop more. If your Finja survives, you pull out 2 Murlocs, you play the 3rd one, drop the Cold Blood on something and play let’s say SI:7, now you have a huge board and your opponent needs a big AoE or he loses. You really want to put him in those difficult situations. Removing everything one by one is not an option, because there is just too much. He either plays something like Flamestrike or Twisting Nether or he loses.

Of course, you try to play around the AoEs a bit. Knowing exactly what kind of AoEs are available to your opponents each turn is important. So if you already have 3 minions on the board on turn 6, against Mage, you don’t play another one to not play into Flamestrike. Or you can play one, if it’s let’s say Argent Horserider, The Curator or big Edwin that will survive AoE.

When you have The Curator in your hand, you try to play it as fast as possible. Drop him right away on turn 7 if you can. The longer you wait, the higher the chance is that you will draw all the cards you can pull out from him. With only 1 Beast and 2 Dragons, it’s quite likely that you do, so the earlier you play it, the more value you guarantee. The Curator is one of the ways to keep up with the slower decks. Around turn 7 you should be completely out of steam, and Curator can give you plays for 2 or 3 more turns. It can also potentially give you Finja if you didn’t draw it already.

So, the strategy against Control is to either rush them down (rarely works) or wait for a big tempo swing turn and then try to finish the game in 2-3 turns by having more tempo than they can handle.

General Tips

If you kill something with your Finja, the Flying Star which pulls out Murloc Warleader , the extra health will be added before the death of Finja resolves. It means that if you attack a 5 attack minion with a 4 health Finja, it Finja pulls out 2x Warleader, it will actually survive at 1 health.

which pulls out , the extra health will be added before the death of Finja resolves. It means that if you attack a 5 attack minion with a 4 health Finja, it Finja pulls out 2x Warleader, it will actually survive at 1 health. Shadowstep is an interesting tech. It doesn’t have a single usage, you can use it in multiple different ways. It can be used to get a big VanCleef (Shadowstepping it and replaying for 1 mana is basically +4/+4 for 1), it can be used to deal 2 extra damage with SI:7 Agent or Argent Horserider (also the other small chargers, but only face, because they die after the first trade unless the minion has 0 Attack). You can use it on The Curator in a really slow game, in order to get more value. Playing Curator one turn, killing something next + replaying it can even lead to outvaluing a slow deck (if you have 2nd Azure Drake and some Murloc left in your deck, of course). A lower value gain, but still a value gain if you really need to is playing it on the Swashburglar and replaying it. Then Shadowstep basically turns into a random card from the opponent’s class – which is not always great, but can be lifesaving when you’re looking for something specific (e.g. health gain or burn to finish the game). Shadowstepping Dark Iron Skulker can give you a second AoE. And there is always a burst finisher of Leeroy + Shadowstep – it’s 12 damage for 8 mana. The card is very flexible and you will most likely find another use for it each game. In most of the games, it should give you decent value and its flexibility makes it a solid include.

is an interesting tech. It doesn’t have a single usage, you can use it in multiple different ways. It can be used to get a big VanCleef (Shadowstepping it and replaying for 1 mana is basically +4/+4 for 1), it can be used to deal 2 extra damage with or (also the other small chargers, but only face, because they die after the first trade unless the minion has 0 Attack). You can use it on in a really slow game, in order to get more value. Playing Curator one turn, killing something next + replaying it can even lead to outvaluing a slow deck (if you have 2nd Azure Drake and some Murloc left in your deck, of course). A lower value gain, but still a value gain if you really need to is playing it on the Swashburglar and replaying it. Then Shadowstep basically turns into a random card from the opponent’s class – which is not always great, but can be lifesaving when you’re looking for something specific (e.g. health gain or burn to finish the game). Shadowstepping can give you a second AoE. And there is always a burst finisher of Leeroy + Shadowstep – it’s 12 damage for 8 mana. The card is very flexible and you will most likely find another use for it each game. In most of the games, it should give you decent value and its flexibility makes it a solid include. If you happen to draw Patches the Pirate instead of getting it for free, it’s not always worth it to just play it immediately. It’s just 1 damage and it can get killed really easily. As a 1 mana Charge minion, it can be used to make your trades better (e.g. “ping off” a 1 health minion) or activate combos.

instead of getting it for free, it’s not always worth it to just play it immediately. It’s just 1 damage and it can get killed really easily. As a 1 mana Charge minion, it can be used to make your trades better (e.g. “ping off” a 1 health minion) or activate combos. Similarly, Southsea Deckhand is not always a great thing to drop on the board. For example, against Pirate Warrior you might want to keep it for turn 3 to Charge it into something. When you play it on turn 1, it can easily get killed by N'Zoth's First Mate and you won’t really gain anything from it. On turn 3, after daggering up on turn 2, you can let’s say clear a Bloodsail Corsair or kill one of the 3-drops when combined with Backstab or another Charger. Same goes for playing it e.g. against Mage on turn 1 – Reno Mage will often want to ping on t2 anyway and you just give him one of the best Hero Power targets. Instead, you can keep it for a later turn when pinging will be awkward (e.g. before a 4-drop turn) or to immediately charge into something and get the value.

Aggro Rogue Card Substitutions

The list is pretty expensive for an Aggro deck. It runs multiple Legendaries and honestly, most of them are pretty crucial to the deck. I will list all the non-adventure Legendaries and give you possible replacements:

Patches the Pirate – It’s one of the reasons why you run the early Pirate package. While you can play the deck without Patches, it will be significantly weaker. You’d probably want to run an extra 1-drop like a second Argent Squire to help against faster decks (losing Patches hurts those matchups most).

– It’s one of the reasons why you run the early Pirate package. While you can play the deck without Patches, it will be significantly weaker. You’d probably want to run an extra 1-drop like a second to help against faster decks (losing Patches hurts those matchups most). Edwin VanCleef – Edwin is consistently proving to be one of the best Legendaries in the game, as it gets into every Rogue list. The deck can definitely be played without it, but it would be significantly weaker, as there would be less tempo swing potential. I’d say that you should go for the Tomb Pillager if you don’t have Edwin.

– Edwin is consistently proving to be one of the best Legendaries in the game, as it gets into every Rogue list. The deck can definitely be played without it, but it would be significantly weaker, as there would be less tempo swing potential. I’d say that you should go for the if you don’t have Edwin. Shaku, the Collector – Rogue always had problems with filling the early drops slots. While 2-drop is not that problematic, because Hero Power is good enough, 3-drop slot is harder. Cards like SI:7 or Edwin require combo to work and Shaku is great, because you can drop it on t3 no matter what the board state is and what cards you have in your hand – no need for combos or anything. However, it’s a pretty niche Legendary and it’s not 100% necessary. I’d replace it with a second Jungle Panther . It’s another proactive 3-drop and while you don’t get the extra card, the +2 damage might matter. Plus it makes your Curator more consistent by reducing the chance of drawing every Beast (which is currently exactly 1) before dropping it.

– Rogue always had problems with filling the early drops slots. While 2-drop is not that problematic, because Hero Power is good enough, 3-drop slot is harder. Cards like SI:7 or Edwin require combo to work and Shaku is great, because you can drop it on t3 no matter what the board state is and what cards you have in your hand – no need for combos or anything. However, it’s a pretty niche Legendary and it’s not 100% necessary. I’d replace it with a second . It’s another proactive 3-drop and while you don’t get the extra card, the +2 damage might matter. Plus it makes your Curator more consistent by reducing the chance of drawing every Beast (which is currently exactly 1) before dropping it. Finja, the Flying Star – Absolutely necessary. It’s the reason why you even run the Murloc package and The Curator in the first place. If you want to play this deck, you need Finja. If you don’t have and don’t want to craft Finja, you should try to look for some other list instead (there are Aggro Rogue lists without Murloc package, but they’re weaker).

– Absolutely necessary. It’s the reason why you even run the Murloc package and The Curator in the first place. If you want to play this deck, you need Finja. If you don’t have and don’t want to craft Finja, you should try to look for some other list instead (there are Aggro Rogue lists without Murloc package, but they’re weaker). Leeroy Jenkins – One of your main finishers. Burst from Leeroy is very valuable and the fact that you can Cold Blood or Shadowstep it for an even bigger burst turn makes it a great card in the list. However, if you don’t own it, I’d probably play Tomb Pillager to make your turn 4 more consistent (right now you often end up playing a 3-drop or 2-drop + Hero Power on turn 4).

I would like to remind you, however, that Legendaries are pretty important in most of the decks and replacing them might reduce the given deck’s quality/performance significantly.

Closing

If you have any questions or suggestions, feel free to leave them in the comment section below. If you want to be up to date with my articles, you can follow me on Twitter.

Good luck on the ladder and until next time!