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Heart of Crown Coronation Timing Guide | The Most Critical Decision

A complete guide to coronation timing in Heart of Crown. Covers early vs. late coronation trade-offs, reading opponent moves, and post-coronation strategy.

What Is Coronation?

Coronation is the single most important move in Heart of Crown.

When you coronate:

  • Your princess is placed in your "domain" and her ability triggers (if any)
  • The final succession point race begins
  • You signal to all opponents that the endgame has started

Coronation timing is what separates experienced players from beginners.


Coronation Requirements

You can coronate during the Buy Phase when:

  1. You have a Metropolis in hand or play area
  2. Your total coins reach 6 or more (including the Metropolis's 3 coins)

In other words, you need Metropolis plus at least 3 more coins from other sources.


Three Phases of Coronation Analysis

Phase 1: Coronation Preparation (Early-Mid Game)

You can't coronate yet. Your objectives:

  • Buy economy cards: City, Court Lady, strong Common cards
  • Compress your deck: Trash Villages with Donation
  • Purchase your princess: The prerequisite for coronation (cost 6 — requires good economy)
  • Secure a Metropolis: Essential for coronation; opponents want it too

Phase 2: The Coronation Decision (Mid Game)

Once you have a Metropolis and start consistently hitting 12 coins, the question becomes: should I coronate now?

Phase 3: The Endgame (Post-Coronation)

After coronation it's a pure succession point race. The question is: how many high-cost succession point cards can you buy with Metropolis's 3 coins plus the rest of your hand?


How to Judge Your Coronation Timing

Benefits and Drawbacks of Early Coronation

Benefits:

  • More turns to collect succession point cards
  • Princesses with coronation bonuses (like Laoriri) reward early coronation most
  • You set the game's pace before opponents do

Drawbacks:

  • Coronating with a weak deck means only 6 coins per turn
  • You won't be able to buy high-value succession cards, and opponents catch up
  • You stop developing your economy prematurely

Benefits and Drawbacks of Late Coronation

Benefits:

  • A fully developed deck maintains high buying power every turn
  • Succession point collection becomes more efficient

Drawbacks:

  • If an opponent coronates first, your available turns shrink dramatically
  • Opponents have a head start on succession points

Practical Timing Guidelines

Economy Benchmark

Target: consistently producing 12+ coins per turn before you coronate

Think about what you need post-coronation:

  • Duke (6 VP, cost 8) requires 8 coins
  • Senator (3 VP, cost 5) requires 5 coins

If your deck reliably generates 8–10 coins per turn after coronation, you're ready.

Turn Benchmark

A typical game lasts 15–20 turns per player.

  • Coronating before turn 10: Early coronation. Risky with a weak deck, but valid with princess bonuses
  • Turns 12–14: Standard coronation window
  • Turn 15+: Late coronation. High risk of falling behind on succession points

Reading Your Opponent

The most critical skill is predicting when your opponent will coronate.

Signs that your opponent is close:

  • They've already bought a Metropolis
  • Their deck is thin (around 10–15 cards)
  • They're generating large amounts of coins each turn

If you see these signs, prepare to coronate within 2–3 turns yourself.


Post-Coronation Strategy

Counting Remaining Turns

After coronation, all opponents receive a limited number of remaining turns (see rulebook). Focus on:

  • Maximizing how many succession points you can collect in your remaining turns
  • Considering disruption attacks to reduce opponents' remaining turns

Succession Point Card Priority

Card Cost VP Efficiency
Emperor's Crown 13 14 Maximum VP but very expensive
Duke 8 6 Standard high-value target
Imperial Capital Kalikuma 11 6 High cost, high VP
Margrave 6 3 Good cost-to-VP ratio
Senator 5 3 Best mid-cost efficiency
Court Lady 3 2 Excellent with Laoriri

When your post-coronation coins are low: Focus on Senators (cost 5)
When you have strong coin generation: Chase Dukes and Imperial Capital
Immediately after Laoriri coronation: 5 Court Ladies land in your deck — instant economy boost

Using Ladies-in-Waiting

Don't overlook the Ladies-in-Waiting series — they can be placed in your domain after coronation.

  • Lily / Honoka / Minyan / Sharifa / Petite: 2 VP each, plus field effects
  • Grabbing 1–2 at coronation time creates meaningful advantages in the endgame race

Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

Mistake 1: Coronating with too little economy

Symptom: You can only afford Senators (5 VP) every turn after coronation
Fix: Build 3+ Cities and 2–3 Court Ladies before considering coronation

Mistake 2: Reacting to opponent coronation in a panic

Symptom: Coronating with a weak deck because you "had to," then struggling
Fix: Constantly track your opponent's Metropolis purchases and buying power growth

Mistake 3: Continuing to buy economy cards after coronation

Symptom: You're still buying Cities while opponents are collecting Dukes
Fix: At the moment of coronation, mentally flip your strategy from "economy" to "succession points"


Summary: Pre-Coronation Checklist

Before you coronate, verify:

  • Metropolis is in your hand or play area
  • You consistently generate 10+ coins per turn
  • Village count in deck is 3 or fewer
  • Your opponent's deck looks close to coronation-ready
  • You've already purchased your princess

If these boxes are checked, coronate without hesitation.