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Patches the Pirate
Regular
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Gold
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Set:Mean Streets of GadgetzanMean Streets of Gadgetzan
Type:Minion
Minion type:Pirate
Class:NeutralNeutral
Rarity:LegendaryLegendary
Cost:1 Mana icon
Attack:1 Attack icon
Health:1 Health
Abilities:Charge, Put into battlefield
Wiki tags:In-deck effect, Pirate-related, Triggered effect
After you play a Pirate, summon this minion from your deck.
Flavor text

What do sailors yell when Patches steals their treasure chest full of laws and other things being transported to parliament for a vote? "The Eyes have it!"

External links

Data pageHearthpwn

TBC2
The subject of this article is due to undergo upcoming changes.
This article will be updated soon. For details, see Patch changes section.
The subject of this article is due to undergo upcoming changes and will be updated soon. For details, see Patch changes section.

Patches the Pirate is a legendary neutral minion card, from the Mean Streets of Gadgetzan set.

How to get

Patches the Pirate can be obtained through Mean Streets of Gadgetzan card packs, or through crafting.

Card Crafting cost Disenchanting
Patches the Pirate 1600 400
Golden Patches the Pirate 3200 1600

Notes

Strategy

Only desirable in a deck containing Pirates, good timing is required to make the most of this card, since it will enter the battlefield as soon as the player plays their first Pirate - provided there is space, and provided it hasn't already been drawn. If it isn't drawn first, this is effectively a free card. As with other similar effects, Patches will always be summoned on the right side of the board, which is relevant for positional buffs like the one granted by LegacyFlametongue Totem.

For Rogues, Patches is a nice supplement for turn-one plays thanks to having many useful Pirate one-drops, such as One Night in KarazhanSwashburglar and Mean Streets of GadgetzanSmall-Time Buccaneer.

This card forms a combo with Blackrock MountainGang Up: by casting it on Patches, the next time the player plays a Pirate they will summon three more Patches.

Patches is most easily activated in a Pirate deck, such as Pirate Warrior, that contains many Pirates. However, many other deck types can be modified to include a few Pirates, or may already include some, without truly being a Pirate deck. Examples include Mean Streets of GadgetzanSmall-Time Buccaneer, LegacySouthsea Deckhand, LegacyBloodsail Raider and LegacyDread Corsair. Even a couple of Pirates is enough to benefit from including Patches, serving to effectively buff the value of those cards.

Patches also has some value by "shrinking" the player's deck - activating his put into battlefield effect means the player effectively plays with a 29-card deck, making draws ever so slightly more predictable.

Quotes

Summon
I'm in charge now!
Attack
Aye aye!

Lore

Patches is unique to Hearthstone. Similar to the Goblins vs GnomesFloating Watcher, Patches is an observer, but he is also the first known example of an observer pirate. He is the envy of pirates everywhere due to having more eyepatches than most pirates have eyes.[2][3]

Wowpedia iconThis section uses content from Wowpedia.
Observers, also known as floating eyes, are an intelligent race of floating eyeball squids native to the Great Dark Beyond.

History

Patches saw its first iteration in early 2014 as "Dragon Whelp", a non-legendary 1/1 Dragon to be included in the Blackrock Mountain set. Its effect was similar to the final card, but was triggered by the playing of a Dragon rather than a Pirate, and it did not have Charge. The non-legendary status also allowed the player to include 2 copies in their deck. However, a preference for Dragons to mostly remain high-cost, and "odd" synergy with LegacyFaerie Dragon resulted in the developers dropping card from the set, and trying it as a legendary minion in the next set.[3]

The developers "briefly considered" making the card a Murloc, but despite its design fitting with the type's swarming gameplay, it was found to be the most fun as a Pirate. Once it was changed to a legendary, the developers tried making the card a 2/1, before settling on a 1/1 Charge design. While it worked well in the Grand Tournament set, the card was removed "last second" due to synergy with One-Eyed Cheat and Goblins vs GnomesShip's Cannon.[4] It was only the introduction of game formats and the relegation of One-Eyed Cheat to Wild format that would later make the card's design viable; this would prevent it from achieving problematic power levels in Standard format, while its higher power level would not be considered problematic in Wild format, which has a higher power level overall as well as a higher tolerance for unusual combos in general.[5][3][6]

Prior to the card's removal, The Grand Tournament featured two legendary Pirate minions: The Grand TournamentSkycap'n Kragg and Captain Scaleblade.[7] The card discussed on this page was the original Skycap'n Kragg.[8] Because the art for that card was somewhat iconically seen in the expansion's trailer, when the effect of the card was deemed too powerful, the art and titles of the two Pirates were swapped, with Skycap'n Kragg becoming a 4/6 Charge, and the other design (and character) being left out of the set.[9][3]

However, while it was removed from the set, the original stats and art for the removed Pirate card were still shown in the expansion's trailer. As a result, players became curious about the unnamed legendary. Brode revealed some background about the card, including that it had been removed due to synergy with an unnamed card from the Goblins vs Gnomes set,[10][5] but stated that he was "going to try and sneak it in again someday, so no spoilers".[11] Balance Designer Dean Ayala described it as his favourite card,[12] stating "it was a card so awesome that it would have overshadowed everything else, thus must have been cut."[13]

With Brode continuing to champion its inclusion in each new set,[9] the developers tried again to add the card in Whispers of the Old Gods, as the original design for Whispers of the Old GodsN'Zoth's First Mate (initially jokingly titled "Dean’s First Mate", in reference to Dean Ayala's love of the card).[4] However, despite being a Warrior-only card, the design was again cut. In July 2016 Brode admitted that he regretted not having made the card.[14][3]

It was not until 16 months after its first public appearance in the The Grand Tournament trailer that the card would see an official debut as Patches the Pirate, featured as part of the initial reveal for Mean Streets of Gadgetzan. The set was the right fit for Patches due to several factors, most importantly the removal of One-Eyed Cheat and Ship's Cannon from Standard format, as well as the position of Mean Streets as the final set of the year, resulting in a bigger card pool and thus a reduced likelihood of Patches having a 'disproportionate' impact.[4]

Patches is therefore the third name and art for the same underlying card design, with all three depicting flying pirates of one kind or another. According to senior game designer Matt Place, the card's roughly 2 year history "might be the record. It's certainly one of the longest running development cycles of any card."[4]

Trivia

  • The character Patches the Pirate originated in a meeting between members of the Hearthstone team and members of the World of Warcraft story team, while "brainstorming some ideas for pirates".[15][4] The Beholder pirate was specifically conceived by then-WoW designer Dave Kosak, who would later join Team 5 just before the release of the set.[4][16]
  • Designer Dean Ayala describes Patches the Pirate as his favourite card of the Mean Streets set, relating the following story of its original incarnation:
"It was my favorite card and a lot of the design group still makes fun of me. Because it was the last week [before] BRM and he was in the set and I was like, 'Oh, this is awesome, I want to play him in my deck.' And then I got sick and I came back and they were like, 'Oh, we cut your favorite card.' Now every time anyone gets sick we're like, 'What's your favorite card?' 'No! I'm not telling you!'"[17]
  • The name "Patches the Pirate" may be a reference to the character "Patchy the Pirate" from the cartoon series SpongeBob SquarePants.
  • Patches' use of "I'm" and "aye" in his summon and attack quotes, respectively, are likely intended as puns on "eye".
  • Patches' summoning quote could be a reference to the line "Look at me, I am the captain now" from the movie Captain Phillips, starring Tom Hanks.

Artist

Template:Setartist

Gallery

Patches the Pirate full

Patches the Pirate, full art

Patch changes

  • Mean Streets of Gadgetzan logo Patch 7.0.0.15590 (2016-11-29): Added.
  • Upcoming 10.2 patch: No longer has Charge and has a different voiceline upon effect activation.

References

 
  1. Yong Woo on Twitter. (2016-11-04). 
  2. BlizzCon 2016, Mean Streets of Gadgetzan - Hearthstone What's New Panel
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Ben Brode on reddit. (2016-11-05). 
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 PC Gamer - The two-year making of Hearthstone’s Patches the Pirate. (2016-12-15). 
  5. 5.0 5.1 Hearthpwn - Whispers of the Old Gods Developer Q&A Transcript, This Week in Card Reveals. (2016-04-10). 
  6. Ben Brode on Twitter. (2015-08-15). 
  7. Ben Brode on Twitter. (2016-11-05). 
  8. Ben Brode on Twitter. (2016-03-12). 
  9. 9.0 9.1 Ben Brode on Twitch. (2016-04-17). 
  10. Ben Brode on Twitter. (2016-03-12). 
  11. Ben Brode on Twitter. (2015-08-15). 
  12. Dean Ayala on Twitter. (2015-10-25). 
  13. Dean Ayala on Twitter. (2015-10-25). 
  14. Ben Brode on Twitter. (2016-07-17). 
  15. TAC Hearthstone BlizzCon 2016 Interview with Rachelle Davis and Peter Whalen. (2016-11-15). 
  16. Dave Kosak on Twitter. (2016-12-16). 
  17. Hearthhead - Iksar: Patches Deck Is "Maybe The Single Hardest Deck To Play". (2016-11-13). 
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