2018 Anaheim Regionals: Day 2 Players and Decks

Below are the players who achieved 19 or more Match Points to advance to Day 2 of the 2018 Anaheim Regional Championships. Decks are being added as we continue to receive updates. 
  1. Le Bui, 8-0-1 - Zoroark-GX/Red Card/Delinquent
  2. Jimmy Pendarvis, 7-0-2 - Zoroark-GX/Seismitoad-EX
  3. Preston Ellis, 7-0-2 - Rayquaza-GX
  4. Connor Finton, 7-1-1 - Vespiquen/Flareon
  5. Israel Sosa, 7-1-1 - 
  6. Jon Eng, 7-1-1 - Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  7. Isaiah Williams, 7-1-1 - Zoroark-GX Control
  8. Rey Lazaro, 7-1-1 - 
  9. Marshall Cary, 7-1-1 - 
  10. Nicolas Gist, 7-1-1 - 
  11. Ross Cawthon, 7-2-0 - Shock Lock
  12. Danny Prather, 7-2-0 - 
  13. Kenny Britton, 6-1-2 - 
  14. Wade Oliver, 6-1-2 - 
  15. Justin Kulas, 6-1-2 - Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  16. Azul Garcia Griego, 6-1-2 - 
  17. Dennis Moore, 6-1-2 - 
  18. Isaac Milaski, 6-1-2 - Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  19. Joe Ruettiger, 6-1-2 - 
  20. Jack Fedrow, 6-1-2 - 
  21. Andrew Denkus, 6-1-2 - 
  22. Will Jenkins, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  23. Andrew Scott, 6-2-1 - 
  24. Mark Garcia, 6-2-1 - 
  25. Connor Pederson, 6-2-1 - 
  26. Dylan Gunn, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  27. Aaron Friedman, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  28. Daniel Lozada, 6-2-1 - 
  29. Hale Obernolte, 6-2-1 - 
  30. Andrew Martin, 6-2-1 - Drampa-GX/Garbodor
  31. Sean Poestkoke, 6-2-1 - Golisopod-GX/Garbodor/Seismitoad-EX
  32. Elijah Talley, 6-2-1 - 
  33. Kaleb Sommers, 6-2-1 - 
  34. Mikal Henderson, 6-2-1 - 
  35. Christian Martin, 6-2-1 - 
  36. Danny Treminio, 6-2-1 - 
  37. Alexander Wenceslao, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  38. Benjamin Salonga, 6-2-1 - 
  39. Stephen Bates, 6-2-1 - 
  40. Carly Clements, 6-2-1 - 
  41. Frank Diaz, 6-2-1 - 
  42. Christian Franco, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  43. Steven Rodriguez, 6-2-1 - 
  44. Michael Pramawat, 5-0-4 - Zoroark-GX/Seismitoad-EX
  45. Nikolas Campbell, 6-2-1 - Sceptile-GX/Leafeon-GX/Cradily/Vileplume/Swampert 
  46. David Veronica, 6-2-1 - 
  47. Riley Hulbert, 6-2-1 - 
  48. Justin Bokhari, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Garbodor

2018 Harrogate Regionals: Day 2 Players and Decks

Below are the players who achieved 19 or more Match Points to advance to Day 2 of the 2018 Harrogate Regional Championships. Decks are being added as we continue to receive updates. 
  1. Adrian Fjell, 8-1-0 - Steelix
  2. Bolly Olufon, 7-0-2 - White Kyurem
  3. Yosefi Gad, 7-0-2 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  4. Bert Wolters, 7-1-1 - Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX with Electrode-GX
  5. Jake Burnyeat, 7-1-1 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel with Reshiram-GX
  6. Philip Schulz, 7-1-1 - Zoroark-GX/Gyarados
  7. Jack Culkin, 7-1-1 - Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX/Weavile
  8. Gonçalo Ferreira, 6-0-3 - Zoroark-GX/Decidueye-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  9. Sen Caubergh, 6-1-2 - Granbull
  10. Alex Dao, 6-1-2 - White Kyurem
  11. Logan Madden, 6-1-2 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  12. Luke Kirkham, 6-1-2 - Buzzwole/Weavile
  13. Phong Nguyen, 6-1-2 - Passimian/Tapu Koko
  14. Daniele Matrigale, 6-1-2 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  15. Adam Hawkins, 6-1-2 - Malamar/Ultra Necrozma-GX
  16. Konsta Kallama, 6-1-2 - Malamar
  17. Lucas Henrique de Araujo Pereira, 6-1-2 - Shuckle-GX/Sceptile/Girafarig 
  18. Jack Gregory-Campbell, 6-1-2 - Buzzwole-GX/Lycanroc-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  19. Timothy Tsang, 6-1-2 - Malamar
  20. Ryan Moorhouse, 6-1-2 - Malamar/Ultra Necrozma-GX
  21. Benjamin Lundtvedt-Martinsen, 6-1-2 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  22. Max Roberts, 6-1-2 - Malamar Spread
  23. Daniel Melrose, 6-2-1 - Granbull
  24. Michael Pustrowski, 6-2-1 - Malamar
  25. Steven Mao, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Decidueye-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  26. Joni Virolainen, 6-2-1 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  27. Ondrej Skubal, 5-0-4 - Passimian/Tapu Koko
  28. Paul Stringer, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  29. Sander Wojcik, 6-2-1 - Regigigas/Hoopa/Necrozma-GX/Shrine of Punishment
  30. Christopher Reyes, 6-2-1 - Malamar
  31. Ӧjvind Svinhufvud, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  32. Lahtela Tommi, 6-2-1 - Glaceon-GX/Shuckle-GX
  33. Tomas Just, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Weavile/Banette-GX
  34. Nicholas Pearce, 6-2-1 - Lost March
  35. Adrian Kastelik, 6-2-1 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  36. Stéphane Ivanoff, 6-2-1 - Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  37. Stian Nilsson, 6-2-1 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel with Shedinja
  38. Erik Bladh, 6-2-1 - Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  39. Nathan Williams, 6-2-1 - Lost March
  40. Christian Wilhelm, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Weavile
  41. Raz Wolpe, 6-2-1 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  42. Jack Old, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  43. Michael Ritchie, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Weavile
  44. Juho Kallama, 6-2-1 - Malamar
  45. Gustavo Wada, 6-2-1 - Shuckle-GX/Sceptile/Girafarig
  46. Siddiqur Rahman, 6-2-1 - Glaceon-GX/Greninja-GX

Other notable decks: 
  • Philip Schulz (Zoroark-GX/Gyarados) was the only Limitless team member to reach Day 2. Below is what the rest of the team played: 
    • Nico Alabas 5-3-1, Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
    • Pedro Eugenio Torres 4-1-4, Meganium/Decidueye-GX/Swampert/Kingdra-GX/Porygon-Z
    • Robin Schulz 4-3-2, Sceptile-GX
    • Jesper Eriksen 4-5-0, Granbull Mill
  • Tord Reklev played the same "Granbull Mill" deck as Jesper Eriksen, finishing 5-2-2. The deck is a Granbull variant with Oranguru UPR, Zebstrika, Judge, Enhanced Hammer, and Max Potion. According to Reklev, this variant makes Granbull's 90-10 matchups more like 70-30, but its unfavorable matchups (such as stall decks) become favorable. 

Team DDG Acquires Azul Garcia Griego

13 December 2018 - Team Dead Draw Gaming, the current first-place team in Limitless TCG's 2018-19 season rankings, has acquired multiple-time Regional Champion, 2017-18 LAIC finalist, and 2017-18 top NA CP earner Azul Garcia Griego.

Team DDG has taken the competitive Pokémon TCG scene by storm this season, winning all five Regionals and SPEs on North American soil so far as well as the 2018-19 LAIC. Their roster features stars such as 2018 Philadelphia Regional Champion Caleb Gedemer, 2018 Portland and Virginia Regional Champion Jimmy Pendarvis, and 2018 Memphis Regional and 2018-19 LAIC Champion Daniel Altavilla, among many others. DDG signed up-and-coming player Carter Musgrove this past Tuesday and added Griego today to bring their current roster size to 19 players.

Griego, who streams on Twitch at AzulGG and can be found on Twitter @Azul_GG, last played for CCG Castle, before becoming a free agent on February 16 of this year after CCG disbanded. He finished the 2017-18 season with the most CP of any North American player and second in the world, behind only Tord Reklev. In addition to winning that season's San Jose Regionals, he infamously lost in the 2017-18 LAIC finals to Dyego Rathje, who was disqualified from a later tournament for cheating.

With this acquisition, Team DDG now boasts 5 of the top 25 players in the Limitless one-year global rankings, 9 of the top 25 players in the Limitless one-year NA rankings, and 7 of the Top 16 players on Pokémon's official US & Canada CP leaderboard.

At this weekend's Anaheim Regionals, all eyes will be on Team DDG--especially with this big new roster addition--to see if they can be stopped from winning a North American major event title for the first time this season. 

2018 Virginia Regionals: Day 2 Players and Decks

Below are the players who achieved 19 or more Match Points to advance to Day 2 of the 2018 Virginia Regional Championships. Decks are being added as we continue to receive updates. 
  1. Charlie Lockyer, 9-0-0 - Lost March
  2. Ryan Antonucci, 8-1-0 - Buzzwole-GX/Lycanroc-GX/Ninetales-GX
  3. Simon Trottier-Lacasse, 7-0-2 - Granbull
  4. Jason Annichiarico, 7-0-2 - Malamar
  5. Zack Taylor, 7-1-1 - Granbull
  6. Adler Pierce, 7-1-1 - Zoroark-GX/Decidueye-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  7. Stephen Hunter, 7-1-1 - Zoroark-GX/Decidueye-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  8. Nguyen Tran, 7-1-1 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  9. Alex Schemanske, 7-1-1 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  10. Beckett Pierce, 7-1-1 - Malamar
  11. Joseph Perez, 7-1-1
  12. Zach Lesage, 7-1-1 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  13. Frank Diaz, 7-1-1
  14. Austin Ellis, 7-2-0 - Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  15. Michael Bergerac, 6-0-3 - Granbull
  16. Ian Robb, 7-2-0 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  17. Tye Pellecchia, 6-1-2 - Buzzwole-GX/Lycanroc-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  18. Brandon Salazar, 6-1-2 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  19. Butch Smith, 6-1-2 - Hoopa/Regigigas/Unown LOT 91
  20. Matt Vuchichevich, 6-1-2 - Naganadel/Quagsire/Suicune-GX/Lugia-GX
  21. Edward Khodaei, 6-1-2 - Hoopa/Steelix/Unown LOT 91
  22. Aaron Morgan, 6-1-2 - Hoopa/Steelix/Wailord/Unown LOT 91
  23. Franco Llamas III, 6-1-2 - Zoroark-GX/Decidueye-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  24. Evan Gregory, 6-1-2 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  25. Isaiah Williams, 6-1-2 - 6-2-1 - Gardevoir-GX/Solgaleo-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX/Swampert
  26. Chris Siakala, 6-2-1 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  27. Noel Totomoch, 6-2-1 - Lost March
  28. Joe Turrentine, 6-2-1 - Magnezone/Dialga LOT
  29. Dalton Didelot, 6-2-1 - Malamar/Ultra Necrozma-GX
  30. Nixon Cedillos, 6-2-1 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  31. Connor Finton, 6-2-1 - Lost March
  32. Chris Fulop, 6-2-1 - Malamar/Ultra Necrozma-GX
  33. Hunter Harless, 6-2-1 - Malamar Spread
  34. Michael Catron, 6-2-1 - Hoopa/Regigigas/Unown LOT 91
  35. Jimmy Pendarvis, 6-2-1 - Gardevoir-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX/Swampert
  36. Lance Bradshaw, 6-2-1
  37. Evan Campbell, 6-2-1
  38. Carl Sitavi, 6-2-1 - Hoopa/Shuckle-GX
  39. Riley Hulbert, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Decidueye-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  40. Azul Garcia Griego, 6-2-1 - Gardevoir-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX/Swampert
  41. Brock Davis, 6-2-1 - Gardevoir-GX/Solgaleo-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX/Swampert
  42. Justin Kulas, 6-2-1 - Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  43. Patrick Littleson, 6-2-1
  44. Justin Bokhari, 6-2-1 - Hoopa/Steelix/Wailord/Unown LOT 91
  45. Rudy Wade, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Banette-GX
  46. Tony Santos, 6-2-1
  47. Russell Maracle, 6-2-1
  48. Rob Stephens, 6-2-1
  49. Brian Miller, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  50. Michael Pramawat, 6-2-1 - Gardevoir-GX/Solgaleo-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX/Swampert
  51. Christopher Watkins, 6-2-1 - Hoopa/Regigigas/Unown LOT 91
  52. Rukan Shao, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Decidueye-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  53. Drew Cate, 6-2-1
  54. Charlie Kerr, 6-2-1
  55. Eric Smith, 6-2-1 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel *
  56. Brian Goodspeed, 6-2-1 - Gardevoir-GX/Solgaleo-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX/Swampert
  57. Tristan Lackey, 5-0-4 - Zoroark-GX/Decidueye-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  58. Tristan Fearing, 6-2-1 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  59. Ryan Mefford, 6-2-1 - Buzzwole-GX/Lycanroc-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  60. Nic Stewart, 6-2-1 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  61. Jeff Kang, 6-2-1 - Malamar with Ditto ♢ and Zoroark-GX
  62. Josh Taylor, 6-2-1 - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  63. Marcus Guy, 6-2-1
  64. TJ Knowles, 6-2-1 - Hoopa/Regigigas/Unown LOT 91
  65. Noah Peltier, 6-2-1 - Granbull
  66. Matthew Grooms, 6-2-1 - Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  67. Tyler Ralston, 6-2-1
  68. Daniel Green, 6-2-1

* Eric Smith actually played a Sceptile-GX deck during the early rounds of the tournament. During a mid-round deck check, it was found that that list had not been successfully submitted in RK9 Labs, but Smith was allowed to continue the tournament with a backup list he did submit (Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel).  

2018 Virginia Regionals: Top Players' Decks and Metagame Trends

Day 2 advancements

After Round 8:

  • Ryan Antonucci
  • Azul Garcia Griego
  • Stephen Hunter
  • Zach Lesage, Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  • Brian Miller, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  • Tye Pellecchia
  • Adler Pierce
  • Beckett Pierce
  • Tony Santos
  • Alex Schemanske
  • Zack Taylor
  • Joe Turrentine, Magnezone/Dialga LOT
  • Noel Totomoch, Lost March
  • Matt Vuchichevich


After Round 7:
  • Jason Annichiarico
  • Michael Bergerac, Granbull with PokéNav
  • Austin Ellis, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  • Charlie Lockyer, Lost March
  • Tran Nguyen
  • Chris Siakala
  • Carl Sitavi
  • Simon Trottier-Lacasse

Expected metagame
Some of the most-played and most-successful decks are expected to be Buzzwole/Alolan Ninetales-GX, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX, Zoroark-GX/Decidueye-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX, Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel, Malamar variants, and Granbull.

Zoroark-GX Control is expected to be heavily countered after winning the LAIC last weekend.

Some under-the-radar decks rumored to be good plays include Gardevoir-GX, spread decks (Tapu Koko), and stall decks (Hoopa variants with Regigigas, Steelix, and/or Wailord).


Top players' decks
Check back here as PokéStats receives updates throughout the day. 

Michael Bergerac - Granbull
Justin Bokhari - Hoopa/Steelix/Wailord Stall
Austin Ellis - Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
Jon Eng - Buzzwole-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
Connor Finton - Lost March
Caleb Gedemer - Gardevoir-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX/Swampert
Wesley Hollenberg - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
Zach Lesage - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
Charlie Lockyer - Lost March
Grant Manley - Hoopa/Shuckle-GX Stall
Jimmy Pendarvis - Gardevoir-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX/Swampert
Xander Pero - Zoroark-GX/Decidueye-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
Noel Totomoch - Lost March


Other successful rogues
Patrick Brodessor - Slaking (with Zoroark-GX?)
Dalton Didelot - Malamar/Ultra Necrozma-GX
Joe Turrentine - Magnezone/Dialga LOT

2018-19 LAIC: Day 2 Players and Decks

Below are the players who achieved 19 or more Match Points to advance to Day 2 of the 2018-19 LAIC. Decks are being added as we continue to receive information. 
  1. Ian Robb, Buzzwole-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX/Custom Catcher
  2. Fabrizio Bellucci, Zoroark-GX/Decidueye-GX (Lillie + Balls, no Elm)
  3. Joe Ruettiger, Zoroark-GX Control
  4. Daniel Altavilla, Zoroark-GX Control
  5. Nicolas Magliulo
  6. Caio Navarro, Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  7. Alex Schemanske, Buzzwole-GX/Lycanroc-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  8. Clifton Goh, Zoroark-GX/Decidueye-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  9. Lucas Henrique De Araujo Pereira, Passimian
  10. Javier Gamboa, Granbull
  11. Robin Schulz, Gardevoir-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX/Solgaleo-GX/Swampert
  12. Victor Freitas, Granbull
  13. Eder Jarillo Soto, Zoroark-GX/Decidueye-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  14. Agustín Pasini
  15. Felipe Carreño
  16. Fabien Pujol, Decidueye-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  17. Roberto Gomes Coregio Junior, Zoroark-GX/Glaceon-GX
  18. William Azevedo, Malamar Spread
  19. Manuel Jorach, Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  20. Agustin Campo
  21. Vitor Lugon, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  22. Gabriel Modesto
  23. Tord Reklev, Granbull
  24. Pedro Henrique Cunha de Lacerda, Passimian/Tapu Koko
  25. Giovanni Peragallo
  26. Michael Pramawat, Zoroark-GX Control
  27. Nicolas Antonio Galaz Sanhueza, Granbull
  28. Bastian Silva
  29. Gabriel Massaroth
  30. Dillon Bussert, Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  31. Miloslav Poslední, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  32. Eduardo Storto, Malamar Spread (Spell Tag)
  33. Gustavo Wada, Passimian/Tapu Koko
  34. Jimmy Pendarvis, Zoroark-GX Control
  35. Ramon Duarte, Zoroark-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX/Weavile
  36. Antonio Vitor Jardim
  37. Thiago Burda Mayer
  38. Paulo Gouveia de Freitas
  39. Sebastian Ignacio Arias Pastene, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  40. Jorge Nieto, Malamar (GasKan with Giratina)
  41. Dalton Acchetta, Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  42. Zach Lesage, Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  43. Caleb Gedemer, Zoroark-GX Control
  44. Felipe Kato
  45. Damian Riquel, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  46. Joaquim Postal, Lost March
  47. Sebastian Lugo
  48. Bryan de Vries
  49. Marcus Vinícius Silva
  50. Renato Christian, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  51. Vinicius Lopes, Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  52. Tobias Thesing, Gardevoir-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX/Swampert
  53. Jorge Salas
  54. Nelson José Motta Rodrigues, Steelix/Wailord/Unown LOT 91
  55. Riley Hulbert, Zoroark-GX Control
  56. Pedro Freitas, Zoroark-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX
  57. Jose Marrero, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  58. Rodolfo Jesus
  59. Ricardo Pereira Celebroni, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  60. Pedro Giovannetti Marques Ricardo, Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
  61. Augusto Lespier, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  62. Marcelo Magalhaes
  63. Júlio César Crusaro, Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  64. Benjamin Ferrel
  65. Bruno Santos Lima

2018-19 LAIC: Notable Decks

Pairings link
https://player.rk9labs.com/pairings/E75303B8

Top players' decks
Diego Cassiraga - Granbull
Jesper Eriksen - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
Caleb Gedemer - Zoroark-GX Control *
Natalia Godinho Fernandes - Gardevoir-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX/Swampert
Zach Lesage - Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel
Jit Min Lim - Zoroark-GX/Decidueye-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX/Counter Gain
Jose Marrero - Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
Rahul Reddy - Zoroark-GX/Banette-GX/Lycanroc-GX/Weavile
Tord Reklev - Granbull
Ian Robb - Buzzwole/Alolan Ninetales-GX/Custom Catcher
Joe Ruettiger - Zoroark-GX Control *
Gustavo Wada - Passimian/Spread
Isaiah Williams - Zoroark-GX Control *

* Same 60 -- Team DDG list

Game, Set, March: Early Analysis of Lost March by Top Players

✏ Tate Whitesell | @twhitesell42

The latest expansion to the Pokémon TCG, Lost Thunder, brings over 200 new cards--by far the largest set ever released. With so many potential new decks and updates to old decks, I wanted to bring readers some coverage of the new cards and decks to help prepare for your upcoming SUM-LOT League Cups and larger tournaments.

I asked for input on Twitter, and several well-respected players got back to me with some solid analysis of a much-debated new deck: Lost March. Focused on putting your own Pokémon in the Lost Zone and then dealing big damage with Jumpluff or Natu, Lost March is reminiscent of the all-powerful Night March that ruled Standard a couple of years ago (and is still played in Expanded). But not all players agree that Lost March will be even close to as strong as Night March was. In this article you'll hear from several players on why Lost March will or won't be good, the archetype's strengths and weaknesses, some ideas on building the deck, and how the concept could evolve in the future. Their responses are quoted directly, although I have made minor edits for correction and clarity.

Note: At the time this article goes to press, Lost March seems to be an under-the-radar deck on Facebook and article sites, with discussion focused more on Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel, Malamar variants, Zoroark-GX variants, and single-Prize-attacker decks like Alolan Exeggutor and Granbull


Ryan Allred
Pro-Play Games; 34th at 2018 Memphis Regionals; Day 2 at first four Regionals of 2017-18 season

I don't think [Lost March] can be a great deck with the tools it currently has. It folds too easily to any spread, and it has too many moving parts to set up and stream attackers without something like Shaymin-EX in format. It's not a terrible deck, but it's like Tier 3.

The comparison to Night March is valid, but Lost March is just missing a lot of tools [that Night March had]. The biggest one is Battle Compressor, but Shaymin-EX is big too. We're also in a format with a lot of good one-Prize attackers, which is something Night March always struggled against.


Zander Bennett
Rare Candy; 2x Regional Top 64 in 2017-18 season

I think Lost March will work decently well in metagames like what we saw at the 2018 Memphis Regionals, where Zoroark-GX takes a back seat and other decks with lower-HP attackers struggle to deal with non-GX attackers. I think if the new Alolan Ninetales-GX brings along more Stage 2 decks and Zoroark-GX sticks around as a powerhouse, Lost March will be unable to consistently hit the numbers it needs to for important Knock Outs.

The deck also has natural consistency issues because of the lack of cards like Battle Compressor and Trainers' Mail, but Professor Elm's Lecture is a highly underrated card that helps the deck very much.

I see the deck dealing well with Shrine of Punishment decks, Blacephalon-GX/Naganadel, and Rayquaza-GX, while struggling with certain Malamar variants, Zoroark-GX, and any Stage 2 decks with Max Potion that might arise (Gardevoir-GX, Metagross-GX, Sceptile-GX).



Jesper Eriksen
Limitless; 2016 Senior Division World Champion; 3x IC Day 2 including a Top 4

I don't think [Lost March is] the new Night March as some people say. For one thing, the deck poorly handles anything that uses spread damage, such as Tapu Koko, Shining Arceus, and Spell Tag. The low HP of the deck's attackers hurts when playing against Buzzwole-GX and Giratina. While you can trade OHKOs, Spell Tag or double KOs with Alolan Ninetales-GX, Buzzwole-GX, or Decidueye-GX simply kills the deck and I don't think adding Machoke fills that gaping hole.

Going into the SUM-LOT format I think Malamar/Giratina will be the strongest deck and therefore I would only consider Lost March a tier 2 deck. You can look at the Japan Champion's League results to see that the deck didn't perform too well.

The deck is...nothing like the OG Night March.


Peter Kica
Top4Tier Gaming; 2x Regional Top 32 this season; the game's best-known Night March player

Lost March sucks.

It's extremely weak to spread attackers, such as Tapu Koko. It folds to gust effects like Lycanroc-GX's because you need to set up Stage 1s to boost damage.

The deck is not as fast as Night March and takes a bunch of setup.

Unless new [cards] buff it or new innovation on how to play the deck presents itself, the current iteration made popular by Japan is very lackluster and lacks both firepower and consistency. I'd classify it as Tier 3 because it can't even beat Tier 2 decks.


Frank Percic
Team DDG; 2x Regional Top 64 this season

I think the problem with Lost March right now is that without something like Shaymin-EX [in the format] it may be a little slower to get going than Night March. The deck needs a lot of pieces to get moving. The odds that you have Pokémon in hand for Lost Blender are kind of slim given all the other pieces you need for the deck to work. Another problem is your Hoppip getting KOd before you can evolve them to Jumpluff even with Skiploom's Ability. This all ties back to the weaker draw power in the format right now. I'm interested to see what cards [Lost March players] will use to draw through their deck.

I think the inherent ability to take big hits with a one-Prize attacker will propel the deck to Tier 2, but it'll never be what Night March was. That being said, Night March wasn't good until Shaymin-EX came out, and even then it needed Puzzle of Time to really dominate.

I think maybe with Shrine of Punishment, Lost March can supplement its damage output, but other one-Prize decks can still keep up with it in the Prize trade and take advantage of not being Stage 2-focused like Jumpluff.

I think that Trumbeak is really good, and can be used in a lot of other decks.

I'm not worried about Lost March because I'm just gonna slap down a Shuckle-GX and call it a day. 

2018 Lille SPE: Day 2 Players & Decks

Below are the players who achieved 19 or more Match Points to advance to Day 2 of the 2018 Lille SPE. Decks are being added as we continue to receive information. 

  1. Philipp Emmerich
  2. Miloslav Posledni
  3. Friedrich Illbruck
  4. Pedro Eugenio Torres, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  5. Marco Garcia
  6. Karl Peters
  7. Patrick Landis, Ho-Oh-GX/Salazzle-GX
  8. Julien Cretenoud
  9. Karl Blake
  10. Michael Pustrowski
  11. Martin Guilbert, Decidueye-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX/Swampert
  12. Michael Freimuth
  13. Sen Caubergh
  14. Tamao Cameron, Malamar/Psychic
  15. Fabien Pujol, Decidueye-GX/Alolan Ninetales-GX/Swampert
  16. Petr Janouš
  17. Abdallah Khenissi, Solgaleo-GX
  18. Oliver Elwick
  19. Owyn Kamerman
  20. Joe Bernard, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  21. Nico Alabas, Malamar/Psychic
  22. Cédric Gouin, Malamar/Psychic
  23. Vianney Leroy, Malamar/Psychic
  24. Rory Licken, Sylveon-GX
  25. Ӧjvind Svinhufvud
  26. Gabor Van Meenen
  27. Raz Wolpe
  28. Luke Kirkham
  29. Jack Gregory-Campbell
  30. Simon Jouanolou, Metagross-GX
  31. Stéphane Ivanoff, Ho-Oh-GX/Salazzle-GX
  32. Martin Janouš
  33. Patrik Holler
  34. Paul Stringer, Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX

2018 Portland Regionals: Day 2 Players & Decks

Below are the players who achieved 19 or more Match Points to advance to Day 2 of the 2018 Portland Regional Championships. Decks are being added as we continue to receive information. 
  1. Joe Ruettiger, 8-0-1 - Zoroark-GX Control
  2. Franco Llamas III, 7-0-2 - Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  3. Tristan Pisani-Blair, 7-1-1
  4. Jimmy Pendarvis, 7-1-1 - Zoroark-GX Control
  5. Alexander McNeill, 7-1-1 - Drampa-GX/Garbodor
  6. Aaron Friedman, 7-1-1 - Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  7. Nico Gist, 7-1-1 - Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  8. Sascha Rogge, 7-1-1 - Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  9. Isaiah Williams, 6-0-3 - Zoroark-GX Control
  10. Kenny Britton, 6-0-3
  11. Aaron Tarbell, 7-2-0 - Trevenant BREAK
  12. Christopher Schemanske, 7-2-0 - Trevenant BREAK
  13. Sam Chen, 6-1-2 - Archie's Blastoise
  14. Stefan Tabaco, 6-1-2 - Sableye/Garbodor
  15. Lance Bradshaw, 6-1-2
  16. Cory Dickman, 6-1-2
  17. Andrew Jones, 6-1-2
  18. Austin Ellis, 6-1-2 - Fighting Toolbox
  19. Drue Townsend, 6-1-2
  20. John O'Donald, 6-1-2
  21. Daniel Collens, 6-1-2 - Zygarde-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  22. Jay Lesage, 5-0-4 - Trevenant BREAK
  23. Pearce Blend, 5-0-4 - Archie's Blastoise
  24. Zakaria Aossey, 6-2-1 - Trevenant BREAK
  25. Peter Kica, 6-2-1 - Night March
  26. Caleb Gedemer, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX Control
  27. Mark Garcia, 6-2-1
  28. Manuel Jorach, 6-2-1 - Buzzwole-GX/Garbodor
  29. Joe Sanchez, 6-2-1 - Primal Groudon-EX
  30. Kevyn Tibbot, 6-2-1 - Rayquaza-GX
  31. Zachary Everest, 6-2-1 - Archie's Blastoise
  32. Azul Garcia Griego, 5-0-4
  33. Connor Pederson, 6-2-1 - Night March
  34. Kyle Rivera, 6-2-1
  35. DeAndre Holmes, 6-2-1
  36. Danyell Segoviano, 6-2-1 - Trevenant BREAK
  37. Padraic McSwain, 6-2-1
  38. Ian Robb, 6-2-1
  39. Landen Kaetler, 6-2-1 - Sylveon-GX
  40. Polo Le, 6-2-1
  41. Ahmad Akhrass, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX Control
  42. Rahul Reddy, 6-2-1 - Vespiquen
  43. Daniel Rattay, 6-2-1 - Sylveon-GX
  44. Brian Miller, 6-2-1 - Sableye/Garbodor
  45. Kevin Abernathy, 6-2-1
  46. Edan Lewis, 6-2-1 - Alolan Exeggutor
  47. Michael Pramawat, 6-2-1

2018 Portland Regionals: Top Players' Decks

Sam Chen - Archie's Blastoise
Jonathan Crespo - Wailord-EX
Austin Ellis - Fighting Toolbox
Connor Finton - Vespiquen
Caleb Gedemer - Zoroark-GX Control
Drew Kennett - Aerodactyl/Maxie's
Jay Lesage - Trevenant BREAK
Zach Lesage - Trevenant BREAK
Kyle Lesniewicz - Sylveon-GX
Grant Manley - Night March
Jose Marrero - Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
Rahul Reddy - Vespiquen
Joey Ruettiger - Zoroark-GX Control
Christopher Schemanske - Trevenant BREAK
Aaron Tarbell - Trevenant BREAK
Jacob Van Wagner - Archie's Blastoise
Andrew Wamboldt - Alolan Exeggutor
Isaiah Williams - Zoroark-GX Control


Notes
  • Connor Finton and Rahul Reddy are playing the same 60. 
  • Zoroark-GX Control players have added techs such as Seismitoad-EX, Trick Shovel, and Plasma Blast fossil Pokémon (Archen, Lileep, Tirtouga--preventing the user from decking out). 

Portland Pregame: The Early 2018-19 Expanded Meta and Stats & Stories For This Weekend

✏ Tate Whitesell | @twhitesell42

This weekend's Portland Regionals marks not only the first major Expanded tournament of the 2018-19 season, but the first major Expanded event since...May 26th, when Xander Pero won Roanoke Regionals with Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX.

Much has changed since then. Two new sets--Celestial Storm and Dragon Majesty--have been released, and perhaps more importantly, four cards have been banned from the Expanded format: Ghetsis, Hex Maniac, Puzzle of Time, and Wally. Suddenly, Trevenant XY can no longer hit the field on turn 1 (Wally), DCE decks like Zoroark-GX and Night March lose an important resource recovery card (Puzzle), Ability-centered decks can play the game again (Hex), and Item-heavy combo decks can't have their hand stripped to zero on turn 1 (Ghetsis). Needless to say, this has opened up Expanded and a huge amount of decks both old and new are expected to be viable for Portland.


2018-19 Expanded League Cups
In an effort to make some sense out of this unknown metagame, I turned to the League Cup data here on PokéStats (pretty neat how that works out). For the Standard format, Cup data has historically been a decent predictor of what the meta will look like at upcoming events. For Expanded, however, Cup data is less useful, for two reasons: 1) stores run far fewer Expanded Cups than Standard Cups, and 2) attendance at Expanded Cups is generally significantly lower than at Standard Cups. But it certainly can't hurt to at least attempt to find some patterns in this season's Expanded Cup results. The table below shows all decks that have made Top Cut of an Expanded League Cup in PokéStats's database since the start of the 2018-19 season. (While this covers two different formats, SUM-CES and SUM-DRM, Dragon Majesty did very little to affect Expanded; the biggest change seems to be the addition of Kingdra-GX to Archie's Blastoise.)


A contender or just convenient?
While I generally dislike tier lists as a method of analysis, if these decks were to be placed into tiers based on CP earnings, Buzzwole/Garbodor/Shrine probably stands alone in tier 1, with Trevenant, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX, and Garbodor Toolbox making up tier 2. Those tier 2 decks have been, in my view, three of the five most-hyped decks for Portland, with the other two being Zoroark-GX/Garbodor and Archie's Blastoise. I have seen much less hype for Shrine decks; the explanation for that archetype's success at Cups is probably just that the deck is built very similarly in both formats, so players without many Expanded cards could simply port over their Standard list with a few changes and still do well.

Zoroark-GX decks are probably underrepresented here. Players likely struggled with building an optimal Zoroark-GX list after losing Ghetsis, Hex, and Puzzle. This lack of Zoroark-GX is probably part of what opened the door for Trevenant to perform so well.

Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX was the last deck to win a major Expanded event and is a pretty strong deck in a vacuum due to its sheer power and flexibility. The Dimension Valley-focused toolbox-style build of Garbodor, with Necrozma-GX, Mimikyu, Tapu Lele SM45, and more, is another strong deck in an open meta.

🤔🤔🤔
Although Eelektrik has had a fairly decent showing (with a new partner in Rayquaza-GX), I was somewhat surprised to see the other two big Ability-based Energy-acceleration decks, Bronzong and Malamar, completely (the former) or almost (the latter) absent from these data. While Hex Maniac was in the meta, these decks could be completely shut down, but intuition suggests they should be strong in the post-Hex meta. That hasn't apparently been the case so far this season, and these types of decks are one of the things I'm most curious to look for in Portland.

The last deck I want to touch on here is Donphan. Last season, this deck saw only two Day 2 placements during the whole season: Toby Woolner's 9th at Stuttgart Regionals, and Daniel Altavilla's 29th at Salt Lake City Regionals. Yesterday, however, Azul Garcia Griego tweeted a picture of Donphan with no caption. The 👀 emoji was probably implied.

Maybe Azul is trolling or giving some fake hype to Donphan, but maybe he's not. It's definitely a deck that fits the trend of a once-strong, now-forgotten archetype (the card is six years old!) that could find success again through a combination of the banlist updates and newly released cards. Jimmy Pendarvis responded to Azul's tweet with "this doesn't look like the thing we agreed to submit," but another player who finished Top 16 in North America last season and is chasing it again this season has told me
that Donphan "has been testing extremely well" for him.


PokéStats Quick Question: Zoroark-GX
I'd like to implement a "Quick Question" feature here or on our Twitter, in which I ask some top players a reader-submitted question that might be beyond the scope of PokéStats's data (or my personal knowledge of the game), and this is as good a place to start as any. A member of our Discord server asks, "What is the best Zoroark-GX variant for Portland?"
Responses edited slightly for clarity. 

Russell LaParre says: "It's by far Zoroark-GX/Garbodor."

Zach Lesage says: "Zoroark-GX/Garbodor, because it is the most flexible."

Travis Nunlist says: "Probably Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX, because it can do the most damage and most broken things in a single turn."


Halloween Grab Bag
Here are a few more stats, storylines, and trivia to chew on for this weekend's tournament. (None of them taste quite as good as banana Laffy Taffy.)
  • Registration for Portland has surpassed 500 Masters as of my last count. The 2018 Portland Regionals featured only 469 Masters; it was played in the Standard format. 
  • Last year's 13th-ranked CP earner in North America, Christopher Schemanske, will be playing in his first tournament since the 2018 World Championships. Schemanske is focusing this season on judging and running SixPrizes and has said he's not sure if he's chasing a 2019 Worlds invite. 
  • Here's your roundup of rogue decks that you probably won't see in Day 2 in Portland, but can't rule out entirely, because hey, some article site wrote about 'em. 
  • If the Worlds invite requirement is unchanged from last year--400 CP--Daniel Altavilla, Caleb Gedemer, and James Taylor can clinch their invite by earning any amount of CP (i.e., placing Top 128 or better) in Portland, Alex Schemanske can clinch it with a Top 32, and if they were going, Rukan Shao and JW Kriewall could secure it with a Top 8. If the invite requirement increases to 500 CP, Altavilla, Gedemer, and Taylor could still clinch by making Top 4 or better, and Kriewall, Schemanske, and Shao could nab their invites by winning the tournament. 

2018 Memphis Regionals: Day 2 Players and Decks

Below are the players who achieved 19 or more Match Points to advance to Day 2 of the 2018 Memphis Regional Championships. Decks are being added as we continue to receive information. 

Note: as of this writing, our HeyFonte poll is 191-43 in favor of using "Shrine" instead of "SPAS" to describe Shrine of Punishment-based decks. In the spirit of democracy, PokéStats will henceforth be using "Shrine" to describe such decks. 

  1. Gustavo Wada, 9-0-0 - Malamar/Psychic
  2. Emre Erel, 8-1-0 - Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  3. Matthew Browning, 7-0-2 - Malamar/Psychic
  4. Grant Manley, 7-1-1 - Zoroark-GX Control
  5. Bohdan Pelekh, 7-1-1, Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  6. Tye Pellechia, 7-1-1, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX with Zygarde-GX
  7. Colter Martin, 7-1-1
  8. Peter Kica, 7-1-1 - Passimian
  9. Justin Kulas, 7-1-1 - Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  10. Frank Percic, 7-1-1 - Buzzwole/Garbodor Shrine (no Weavile)
  11. James Stephenson, 7-1-1 - Zoroark-GX/Golisopod-GX/Weavile/Deoxys
  12. Michael Feller, 7-1-1
  13. James Arnold, 6-0-3 - Magnezone/Metal
  14. Daniel Altavilla, 6-0-3 - Malamar/Psychic with Chimecho and Oricorio GRI 55
  15. Alex Krekeler, 7-2-0 - Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX with Acerola
  16. Alex Smetana, 6-1-2
  17. Alex Schemanske, 6-1-2 - Tapu Koko Shrine
  18. James Simmerman, 6-1-2
  19. Adam White, 6-1-2
  20. James Taylor, 6-1-2 - Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  21. Jordan Nelle, 6-1-2 - Malamar Shrine
  22. Bryan Hunter, 6-1-2 
  23. Mark Sparks, 6-1-2 - Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  24. Joe Baka, 6-1-2 - Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX with Zygarde-GX
  25. Tommy Nguyen, 6-1-2 - Gardevoir-GX/Sylveon-GX with Xerneas-GX
  26. Brian Stevens, 6-1-2 - Malamar/Psychic
  27. Justin Singh, 6-1-2 - Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  28. Connor Foster, 6-2-1
  29. Matthew Padget, 6-2-1 - Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  30. Andrew Martin, 6-2-1 - Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  31. Jay Young, 6-2-1 - Sylveon-GX
  32. Michael Pramawat, 6-2-1 - Passimian
  33. Darin O'Meara, 6-2-1 - Buzzwole/Garbodor/Shrine
  34. Eric Fowler, 6-2-1 - Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  35. Patrick Dorn, 6-2-1
  36. Conner LaVelle, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX Control
  37. Gregory Carr, 6-2-1 - Ho-Oh-GX/Salazzle-GX
  38. Rob Stephens, 6-2-1 - Tapu Koko Shrine with Buzzwole
  39. Steven Vlosak, 6-2-1
  40. Manuel Jorach, 6-2-1
  41. Jon Eng, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  42. Carl Sitavi, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX Control
  43. Dalton Didelot, 6-2-1 - Malamar/Ultra Necrozma-GX
  44. Brian Miller, 6-2-1 - Sylveon-GX
  45. Pablo Meza, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  46. Daniel Hugar, 6-2-1
  47. Zakary Krekeler, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  48. Jose Marrero, 6-2-1 - Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX/Shining Lugia
  49. Adler Pierce, 6-2-1 - Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  50. Ethan Wilson, 6-2-1 - Malamar Shrine
  51. Evan Campbell, 6-2-1
  52. Kyle Lesniewicz, 6-2-1 - Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  53. Zach Lesage, 6-2-1 - Buzzwole/Garbodor Shrine (no Weavile)
  54. Rukan Shao, 6-2-1 - Malamar/Psychic with Chimecho and Oricorio GRI 55
  55. Kevon Owens, 6-2-1
  56. Vinny Varsalona, 5-0-4 - Malamar/Ultra Necrozma-GX
  57. Branson Lowe, 6-2-1
  58. Michael Catron, 6-2-1 - Lapras-GX/Quagsire
  59. Zach Zamora, 6-2-1 - Golisopod-GX
  60. Jackie Quach, 6-2-1 - Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  61. Isaiah Cheville, 6-2-1 - Malamar/Psychic
  62. Connor Finton, 6-2-1 - Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  63. Benjamin Honts, 6-2-1 - Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  64. Alex Joplin, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  65. Ryan Allred, 6-2-1 - Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  66. Michael Bergerac, 6-2-1 - Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  67. Scott DeGraw, 5-0-4
  68. Joshua Marsden, 6-2-1
  69. Johnathan Thompson, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Glaceon-GX
  70. Austin Ellis, 6-2-1 - Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  71. Slade Robertson, 6-2-1
  72. Caleb Gedemer, 6-2-1 - Malamar/Psychic with Chimecho and Oricorio GRI 55
  73. Aren Ashlock, 6-2-1 - Malamar Shrine
  74. Campbell NeSmith, 6-2-1 - Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  75. Dustin Parker, 6-2-1
  76. Rosh Patel, 6-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX/Zygarde-GX
  77. Josh Taylor, 6-2-1 - Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX

2018 Frankfurt Regionals: Day 2 Players and Decks

Below are the players who achieved 19 or more Match Points to advance to Day 2 of the 2018 Frankfurt Regional Championships. Decks are being added as we continue to receive information.

  1. Bernardo Dias, SPAS: Buzzwole/Garbodor
  2. Patrik Holler, SPAS: Malamar
  3. Gonçalo Pereira, Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  4. Stéphane Ivanoff, Ho-Oh-GX
  5. Hampus Eriksson, Sylveon-GX
  6. Fabien Pujol, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX/Banette-GX
  7. Benjamin Pham, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  8. Borja Joan 
  9. Sander Wojcik, Hoopa/Steelix/Wailord
  10. Cristian Sarnataro, SPAS: Buzzwole/Garbodor/Weavile
  11. Steffen Eriksen, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  12. Luke Kirkham, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  13. Jonatan Arellano, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  14. Raz Wolpe
  15. Kim Pobega
  16. Kristian Hodas
  17. Gavin Irving
  18. Dario Scarno, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  19. Javier Tengo Jofre, Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  20. Martin Janouš, Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  21. Pedro Eugenio Torres, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  22. Alex Dao, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  23. Christian Wilhelm
  24. Stephan Norregaard, Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  25. Manuele Tartaglia, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  26. Laurens van Brecht
  27. Marc Costa
  28. Jonathan Gorgos
  29. Kevin Kral
  30. Luca Clavadetscher, Malamar/Marshadow-GX/Shining Lugia/Psychic attackers
  31. Nunzio Scalise
  32. Ondrej Skubal, SPAS: Passimian
  33. Jakub Tichanek
  34. Martin Guilbert, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  35. Mark Andersen
  36. Tamao Cameron, Zoroark-GX/Banette-GX
  37. Ojvind Svinhufvud
  38. Elena Gomez, Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  39. Adam Hawkins, Malamar/Marshadow-GX/Psychic attackers
  40. Davide Innocente
  41. Tommy Roberts, SPAS: Malamar
  42. Kiera Brady
  43. Matthew Houtput, Zoroark-GX/Golisopod-GX
  44. Giel Weeghmans, SPAS: Buzzwole/Garbodor/Weavile
  45. Daniel Laczko, Malamar/Marshadow-GX/Psychic attackers
  46. François Gauye
  47. Filipp Lausch
  48. Andreas Glomsrud
  49. Philipp Leciejewski, SPAS: Tapu Koko/Buzzwole/Weavile/Poison Barb
  50. Nino Kunz
  51. Leon Goellner
  52. Ilya Kornilov, Zoroark-GX/Buzzwole
  53. Lisa Steinmuller
  54. Pablo Vicente Garcia
  55. Sebastian Salonen

2018 Philadelphia Regionals: Day 2 Players and Decks

Below are the players who earned 19 or more Match Points on Day 1 to advance to Day 2 of the 2018 Philadelphia Regional Championships. Decks are being added as we continue to receive information.

SPAS = Single Prize Attackers With Shrine of Punishment

  1. Caleb Gedemer, SPAS: Buzzwole/Garbodor/Weavile
  2. Xander Pero, Zoroark-GX/Banette-GX/Garbodor
  3. Gustavo Wada, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  4. Ethan Hegyi, SPAS: Buzzwole/Garbodor
  5. Alex Schemanske, SPAS: Buzzwole/Garbodor
  6. Isaac Milaski, Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX/Dhelmise
  7. Hector Ibarra, Zoroark-GX Toolbox
  8. Dalton Didelot, Malamar/Ultra Necrozma-GX
  9. Poet Larson, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  10. Rukan Shao, Malamar/Psychic
  11. John Orgel, Metagross-GX/Ultra Necrozma-GX
  12. Andrew Martin
  13. Zach Lesage, SPAS: Buzzwole/Garbodor
  14. Joey Nawal, Empoleon/Swampert
  15. Ryan Bruckner, Malamar/Psychic
  16. Jose Marrero, Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX/Dhelmise
  17. Franco Puertas, Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX/Dhelmise
  18. Brandon Johnson, SPAS: Malamar
  19. Jimmy Taylor, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  20. Tristan Macek, Malamar/Psychic
  21. Jimmy Pendarvis, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX with Great Ball
  22. Andrew Mahone, Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX/Shining Lugia
  23. Edwin Lopez, Malamar/Psychic/techs
  24. Alex Baker, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  25. Noel Totomoch, SPAS: Passimian/Counters
  26. Jarrett Mescher, Gardevoir-GX/Swampert
  27. Simon Trottier-Lacasse, SPAS: Buzzwole/Garbodor/Weavile
  28. Jeff Smith
  29. Zachary Bokhari, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX with Zygarde-GX
  30. Aaron Rucker, Metagross-GX/Solgaleo-GX
  31. Stephen Hogan, Zoroark-GX/Golisopod-GX
  32. Muhammad Zamet
  33. Robert Rodkey, SPAS: Malamar
  34. Dean Nezam, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  35. Zachary Cooper, SPAS: Malamar
  36. Edward Doherty
  37. Nicholas Roscoe
  38. Isaiah Williams, SPAS: Buzzwole/Garbodor/Weavile
  39. Will Stevens
  40. Andrew Nunez
  41. Nicholas Moffitt
  42. Caleb Doucet
  43. Derek Villagrana, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  44. Mark Dizon, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  45. Richard Rogers
  46. Michael Kohanim, Malamar/Ultra Necrozma-GX
  47. Bryan Hunter, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  48. Thomas Fitzgerald
  49. Nick Race
  50. James Dorsey
  51. Darin O'Meara, SPAS: Buzzwole/Garbodor
  52. Anthony Bruno, Ho-Oh-GX/Salazzle-GX/Shining Lugia
  53. Beckett Pierce, SPAS: Buzzwole/Weavile
  54. William Woodard
  55. Christopher Venier, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  56. Michael Dolan
  57. Justin Bokhari, SPAS: Buzzwole/Weavile
  58. Main Ahmed
  59. Matthew Reenalda
  60. Adam Harris
  61. Manuel Jorach, Magnezone/Dusk Mane Necrozma-GX
  62. Frank Percic, SPAS: Buzzwole/Garbodor
  63. Mike Newey, Vikavolt/Tapu Bulu-GX/Dhelmise
  64. Benjamin Sauk, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  65. Nicholas Freda
  66. Colin Fisher
  67. Joey Ruettiger, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX with Great Ball
  68. Ahmad Akhrass
  69. Ciaran Farah, Magnezone/Dusk Mane Necrozma-GX
  70. Grant Manley, Vikavolt/Tapu Bulu-GX/Shining Lugia/Dhelmise
  71. Daniel Altavilla, SPAS: Buzzwole/Garbodor
  72. Carl Sitavi, Sylveon-GX
  73. Jordan Nelle
  74. Tommy Desjardins Pettinicchio, Zoroark-GX/Weavile
  75. Jason Annichiarico, Malamar/Psychic
  76. Michael Dones, Empoleon
  77. Jacob Mastin
  78. Alex Smetana, SPAS: Buzzwole/Tapu Koko/Counters

2018 Santa Catarina Regionals: Day 2 Players and Decks

Below are the 32 players advancing to Day 2 of the 2018 Santa Catarina Regional Championships, as well as their decks. 
  1. Damian Anile, Buzzwole FLI/Weavile UPR/Magcargo/Shrine of Punishment
  2. Diego Cassiraga, Buzzwole FLI/Weavile UPR/Magcargo/Shrine of Punishment
  3. Felipe Reyes, Zoroark-GX/Golisopod-GX
  4. Alexandre Braga, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  5. Samuel Jacques, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  6. Otavio Gouveia, Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  7. Lucas Pereira, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  8. Gustavo Wada, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  9. Alex Silva, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  10. Juan Pablo Salas Cornejo, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  11. Rafael Yuiti, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  12. Pedro Daher, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  13. Pedro Lacerda, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  14. Eduardo Romanelli, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  15. Vinicius Souza, Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  16. Breno Santos, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  17. Gabriel Modesto, non-GX Beast Box
  18. Nicolas Galaz Sanhueza, Buzzwole FLI/Weavile UPR/Magcargo/Shrine of Punishment
  19. Thiago Giovannetti, Malamar/Shining Lugia/Deoxys/Shrine of Punishment
  20. Bruno Tavares, Silvally-GX/Buzzwole
  21. Gabriel Pino Semedo, non-GX Beast Box
  22. Thiago Jesus, Weavile Spread
  23. Bruno Benetti, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Banette-GX/Shrine of Punishment
  24. Diego Falqui, Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX
  25. Lucas Jacques, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  26. Bruno Sermann, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  27. Artur Carvalho, Buzzwole FLI/Weavile UPR/Magcargo/Shrine of Punishment
  28. William Lacerda, Hoopa/Weavile/Garbodor
  29. Guillherme Banevicius, Malamar/Psychic
  30. Alejo Salvador, Magnezone/Dusk Mane Necrozma-GX/Zoroark-GX
  31. Rodolfo de Jesus, Malamar/Shining Lugia/Deoxys/Shrine of Punishment
  32. Bastian Silva, Vikavolt/Rayquaza-GX

2018 Memphis Regionals Casters Announced

The casting lineup for the 2018 Memphis Regional Championships, held this October 6-7, has been announced by the tournament stream team. Super Rod-cast's Kirk Dubé and Jeffrey Surran will be joined in the booth by well-known player John Kettler in his casting debut.

2018 World Championships: Complete Day 2 Final Standings and Decks

Below are the final standings for Day 2 of the 2018 World Championships, with each player's home country, final record, and deck also listed. You can view decklists here.

  1. Robin Schulz (DE), 8-0-2, Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  2. Jeff Kolenc (CA), 7-2-1, Malamar/Psychic with 2 Marshadow-GX
  3. Klive Jun Jie (SG), 6-2-1, Zygarde-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  4. Pedro Eugenio Torres (ES), 6-2-1, Rayquaza-GX
  5. Eric Smith (US), 5-1-2, Rayquaza-GX
  6. Nicolas Galaz Sanhueza (CL), 5-2-1, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  7. Shuto Hagaki (JP), 5-2-1, Rayquaza-GX
  8. Brian Miller (US), 5-2-1, Zoroark-GX/Golisopod-GX
  9. Martin Janouš (CZ), 5-1-1, Greninja BREAK
  10. Michael Bergerac (US), 5-1-1, Rayquaza-GX with Jolteon-EX/Ninja Boy
  11. Masataka Hirano (JP), 5-2-0, Zoroark-GX/Gallade/Hammers
  12. Fabien Pujol (FR), 5-2-0, Rayquaza-GX
  13. Rahul Reddy (US), 5-2-0, Banette-GX/Garbodor
  14. Jimmy Pendarvis (US), 5-2-0, Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  15. Christopher Schemanske (US), 4-1-2, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor GRI/Banette-GX/Shrine of Punishment
  16. Hunter Butler (US), 4-1-2, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  17. Luca Clavadetscher (CH), 4-1-2, Greninja BREAK
  18. Marc Lutz (DE), 4-1-2, Buzzwole/Magcargo
  19. Joey Ruettiger (US), 4-1-2, Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  20. Azul Garcia Griego (US), 4-1-2, Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  21. Alessandro Cremascoli (IT), 4-2-1, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  22. Takuya Yoneda (JP), 4-2-1, Zoroark-GX/Gallade/Hammers
  23. Seitaro Shibuya (JP), 4-2-1, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  24. Jack Millar (AU), 4-2-1, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  25. Ryan Moorhouse (GB), 3-0-4, Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  26. Alex Schemanske (US), 4-2-1, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor GRI/Banette-GX/Shrine of Punishment
  27. Kristian Hodas (SK), 3-0-4, Greninja BREAK
  28. Gustavo Wada (BR), 4-2-1, Malamar/Hoopa STS/Shrine of Punishment
  29. Àngel Javier Torres (ES), 4-2-1, Rayquaza-GX
  30. Treynor Wolfe (US), 4-2-1, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  31. Clifton Goh (SG), 4-2-1, Yveltal BREAK/Hoopa SHL/Tapu Koko/Espeon-EX/Eneporter
  32. Philip Schulz (DE), 4-2-1 - Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  33. Michael Catron (US), 4-3-0, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  34. Keith Yong (MY), 4-3-0, Malamar/Psychic with Lycanroc-GX/Fighting Energy
  35. Brad Curcio (US), 4-3-0, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  36. Christopher Wilkinson (US), 4-3-0, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  37. Ahmed Ali (US), 4-3-0, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  38. Brent Tonisson (AU), 4-3-0, Zoroark-GX Control with Articuno-GX
  39. Santiago Rossi (AR), 3-1-3, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  40. Kosuke Iugoshi (JP), 4-3-0, Zoroark-GX Control
  41. Adam Knowles (US), 4-3-0, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  42. Joey Ho (SG), 4-3-0, Greninja BREAK
  43. Michael Pramawat (US), 4-3-0, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  44. Athavan Balendran (US), 4-3-0, Rayquaza-GX
  45. Karl Peters (DE), 4-3-0, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  46. Robert Kinbrum (GB), 4-3-0, Buzzwole/Magcargo
  47. Kian Amini (US), 4-3-0, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  48. Benjamin Pham (NL), 4-3-0, Zoroark-GX/Golisopod-GX
  49. Nitish Doolub (GB), 3-2-2, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  50. Ryan Sabelhaus (US), 3-2-2, Banette-GX/Garbodor
  51. Yamil Pietri (US), 3-2-2, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  52. Alex McNeill (US), 3-2-2, Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  53. Andrew Tandianus (AU), 3-2-2, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  54. Miloslav Poslední (CZ), 3-2-2, Greninja BREAK
  55. Israel Sosa (US), 3-3-1, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  56. Poet Larsen (US), 3-3-1, Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  57. Reuben Fong (SG), 3-3-1, Rayquaza-GX
  58. Tom Hall (GB), 3-3-1, Malamar/Shining Lugia
  59. Bryan De Vries (NL), 3-3-1, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  60. Otavio Gouveia (BR), 3-3-1, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  61. Natalia Godinho Fernandes (BR), 3-3-1, Rayquaza-GX
  62. Sam Chen (US), 2-1-4, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  63. Tord Reklev (NO), 3-3-1, Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  64. William Azevedo (BR), 3-3-1, Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  65. Jordan Palmer (AU), 3-3-1, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  66. Patrick Landis (CH), 3-3-1, Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  67. Ondrej Skubal (CZ), 3-3-1, Greninja BREAK
  68. Adam Hawkins (GB), 3-3-1, Zoroark-GX Control
  69. Tait Tran (AU), 3-4-0, Zoroark-GX Control with Articuno-GX
  70. Bert Wolters (NL), 2-2-3, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  71. Daniel Altavilla (US), 2-2-3, Zoroark-GX Control with Articuno-GX
  72. Yoshihide Makabe (JP), 2-2-3, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  73. Angus Johnson (AU), 3-4-0, Zoroark-GX Control with Articuno-GX
  74. Masafumi Ariyoshi (JP), 3-4-0, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  75. Ian Robb (US), 3-4-0, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  76. Aaron Van Der Kolk (AU), 3-4-0 - Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  77. Mitch Knuckey (AU), 3-4-0 - Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  78. Itsuku Kito (JP), 3-4-0, Lapras-GX
  79. Caleb Gedemer (US), 3-4-0, Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  80. Joey Gaffney (CA), 3-4-0, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  81. Sameer Sangwan (AU), 2-2-3, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  82. Peter Kica (US), 3-4-0, Rayquaza-GX
  83. Ryuki Okada (JP), 3-4-0, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  84. Kidd Starck (US), 3-4-0, Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  85. Shane Chee (MY), 2-3-2, Zoroark-GX/Lucario-GX
  86. Nico Alabas (DE), 2-3-2, Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  87. Stéphane Ivanoff (FR), 2-3-2, Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  88. Ross Cawthon (US), 2-3-2, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  89. Heddi Brahmi (FR), 2-4-1, Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  90. Gavin Irving (GB), 2-4-1, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  91. Donguk Jung (KR), 2-4-1, Magnezone/Dusk Mane Necrozma-GX
  92. Christian Ortiz (US), 2-4-1, Rayquaza-GX
  93. Tomas Just (CZ), 2-4-1, Zoroark-GX/Golisopod-GX
  94. Seb Symonds (GB), 2-4-1, Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  95. Lyder Iversen (NO), 2-4-1, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  96. Diego Cassiraga (AR), 1-2-4, Malamar/Hoopa STS/Shrine of Punishment
  97. Shintaro Ito (JP), 2-4-1, Malamar/Ultra Necrozma-GX
  98. Haruki Satoyama (JP), 2-4-1, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  99. Ben Osborn (US), 2-4-1, Rayquaza-GX/Garbodor
  100. Lance Bradshaw (US), 2-4-1, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  101. Marcus Guy (US), 2-4-1, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  102. Connor Finton (US), 2-4-1, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  103. Tyler Ninomura (US), 2-5-0, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  104. Xander Pero (US), 2-5-0, Banette-GX/Garbodor
  105. Blaine Hill (US), 2-5-0, Zoroark-GX/Mismagius
  106. Edwin Lopez (US), 2-5-0, Rayquaza-GX
  107. Magnus Kalland (NO), 2-5-0, Zoroark-GX/Golisopod-GX
  108. Chris Brown (US), 2-5-0, Rayquaza-GX
  109. Ryoma Kimino (JP), 2-5-0, Zoroark-GX Control
  110. Carl Sitavi (US), 1-4-2, Zoroark-GX/Mismagius
  111. Frank Percic (US), 1-5-1, Rayquaza-GX
  112. Brandon Nguyen (US), 1-5-1, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  113. Chulho Kim (KR), 1-5-1, Zoroark-GX Control
  114. Pablo Meza (MX), 1-5-1, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  115. Riley Hulbert (US), 1-5-1, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  116. Daniel Ross-Brown (AU), 1-5-1, Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  117. Mauro Spanò (IT), 1-5-1, Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  118. Jake Ewart (US), 1-5-1, Greninja BREAK
  119. Nathan Brower (US), 1-6-0, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX

Did Not Finish:
  • Adrian Sado (CA), 1-3-1 drop, Malamar/Psychic with 2 Marshadow-GX
  • Damian Ezequiel Anile (AR), 0-3-3 drop, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Zach Lesage (CA), 0-3-1 drop, Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Ben Potter (US), 0-4-0 drop, Lucario-GX/Lycanroc-GX

2018 World Championships: Players Advancing to Day 2

Refresh this page periodically to keep track of all advancements as they occur. As of 8:00 PM CST we believe every qualifier is accounted for below.

Below are the players who achieved 18 Match Points to advance to Day 2 of the 2018 World Championships. Their home country and the deck they used on Day 1 are also listed.

  • Ahmed Ali (US), Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Kian Amini (US), Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Athavan Balendran (US), Rayquaza-GX
  • Michael Bergerac (US), Rayquaza-GX with Jolteon-EX/Ninja Boy
  • Lance Bradshaw (US), Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Nathan Brower (US), Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Chris Brown (US), Rayquaza-GX
  • Hunter Butler (US), Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  • Michael Catron (US), Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Ross Cawthon (US), Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  • Alessandro Cremascoli (IT), Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  • Brad Curcio (US), Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  • Jake Ewart (US), Greninja BREAK
  • Nathalia Godinho Fernandez (BR), Rayquaza-GX
  • Connor Finton (US), Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Reuben Fong (SG), Rayquaza-GX
  • Joey Gaffney (CA), Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Marcus Guy (US), Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Tom Hall (GB), Malamar/Shining Lugia
  • Blaine Hill (US), Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Riley Hulbert (US), Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Gavin Irving (GB), Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Lyder Iverson (NO), Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Peter Kica (US), Rayquaza-GX
  • Robert Kinbrum (GB), Buzzwole/Magcargo
  • Adam Knowles (US), Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Mitch Knuckey (AU), Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Memories
  • Jeff Kolenc (CA), Malamar/Psychic
  • Patrick Landis (CH), Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  • Poet Larsen (US), Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  • Edwin Lopez (US), Rayquaza-GX
  • Alex McNeill (US), Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  • Jack Millar (AU), Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  • Brian Miller (US), Zoroark-GX/Golisopod-GX
  • Tyler Ninomura (US), Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  • Brandon Nguyen (US)
  • Christian Ortiz (US), Rayquaza-GX
  • Ben Osborn (US), Rayquaza-GX/Garbodor BKP
  • Karl Peters (DE), Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  • Yamil Pietri (US), Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  • Ben Potter (US), Lucario-GX/Lycanroc-GX
  • Daniel Ross-Brown (AU), Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  • Santiago Rossi (AR), Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  • Adrian Sado (CA), Malamar/Psychic
  • Carl Sitavi (US), Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Eric Smith (US), Rayquaza-GX
  • Israel Sosa (US), Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Mauro Spanò (IT), Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Kidd Starck (US), Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  • Andrew Tandanius (AU), Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  • Ángel Javier Torres (ES), Rayquaza-GX
  • Aaron Van Der Kolk (AU), Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment
  • Bryan de Vries (NL), Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Chris Wilkinson (US), Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  • Treynor Wolfe (US), Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • Keith Yong (MY), Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment

One Week Til Worlds: Analyzing BKT-CST Tournaments

🖉 Tate Whitesell | @twhitesell42

We are now well into exploring the penultimate format of the 2017-18 season: BREAKthrough-Celestial Storm. With the 2018 World Championships just days away in sunny Nashville, Tennessee, players are hard at work trying to define the format and find that "broken" deck.

We've now had three major tournaments or groups of tournaments in this format: the 2018 ARG Invitational; a Team Win and In PTCGO tournament; and the August 18-19 weekend of League Cups. In this article, I'm going to break down the results of each of those.

Disclaimer: I'm not going to attempt to make concrete predictions about the Worlds metagame. That is best left to players with more experience and skill than myself. Rather, this article (and the links herein) is a resource that compiles results and statistics from recent tournaments, so that you can do your own research and come to a conclusion on what's "the play" for Worlds. 


ARG Invitational
Winning deck: Zoroark-GX Control
Top 16 deck breakdown:
  • 5 Zoroark-GX/Garbodor
  • Rayquaza-GX
  • 2 Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX
  • 2 Zoroark-GX Control
  • 1 Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Memories
  • 1 Gardevoir-GX
  • 1 Naganadel-GX/Stakataka-GX
  • 1 Zoroark-GX/Counters/Magcargo

Coming off its win at the 2018 NAIC, Zoroark-GX/Garbodor continued to see success at the Invitational. All of the ARG lists cut the Kartana-GX that NAIC champion Stéphane Ivanoff used, and three of the five included an Oranguru UPR.

Speaking of Oranguru, Zoroark-GX Control, the Zoroark-GX/Oranguru/disruption deck used by Tord Reklev to reach the NAIC finals, took an early position as the "deck to beat" in this format, with the ARG finals featuring a Zoroark-GX Control mirror match. New lists for this archetype are including Magcargo CST, and some include multiple Crushing Hammer and/or a second Oranguru. However, as we will see in the rest of this article, the deck did not stay atop the format for long.

We saw three Rayquaza-GX decks in Top 16, each constructed slightly differently - mainly regarding the Tool cards used. One played Wishful Baton; one played Fighting Fury Belt; and one played a split of Wishful Baton and Choice Band. None of the Rayquaza-GX decks advanced to Top 8.

ARG also introduced us to the Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine of Punishment/Rainbow Energy archtype. The deck plays no EX or GX Pokémon and relies on building up damage with Buzzwole and Shrine, forcing the opponent to devote resources to taking six Prizes while "on the clock" due to Shrine damage, and cleaning up with Trashalanche. As we will see, this deck took off somewhat at last weekend's Cups and could play a key role in the format during Worlds.

Both Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX decks in Top 16 advanced to Top 4, where both lost to Zoroark-GX Control.


Team Win and In
Total attendance: 232 players

Team Win and In asked me to crunch the numbers on the metagame of their latest tournament. Here's the link to the complete metagame analysis, but below I'll show the most-played archetypes:
While many players took note of Zoroark-GX Control's Invitational performance and brought the deck to the Win and In tournament, we now see that a new deck has arisen to counter it: Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX. Zoroark-GX/Garbodor is also considered by at least some players to have a favorable Control matchup. The meta evolved rapidly in the span of a single week to the point where Control was no longer the "top deck."

Malamar decks were nonexistent in ARG's Top 16 but saw a fair amount of play in this event.

Rayquaza-GX decks were highly played, with the straight "turbo" version being the most common, followed by the version including Garbodor BPT.

Zoroark-GX/Lycanroc-GX is another deck that can go head-to-head with the Control variant, especially with new lists playing few or zero Strong Energy to avoid being disrupted by Enhanced Hammer.

As of the time of this event, Gardevoir-GX and Greninja BREAK also appear to remain as lower-tier but still viable contenders for Worlds.


August 18-19 League Cups
Cups in sample: Ten, 9 with a Top 8 cut and 1 with a Top 4 cut, from five countries. This is on the small end for our Cup samples, but enough CP were tallied that the results are statistically significant.

Click here to view the complete rankings from this Cup sample.

This meta looks similar to the one from the Win & In tournament, with one change: Zoroark-GX Control is even further down the list -- in fact, outside the top 10 CP-earning archetypes.

Buzzwole/Lycanroc-GX and Zoroark-GX/Garbodor are the two best decks in this sample and it isn't particularly close. However, we see the rise of a couple of new or resurgent archetypes in the aforementioned Buzzwole FLI/Garbodor/Shrine as well as Zoroark-GX/Gardevoir-GX. North America Top 16 players Azul Garcia Griego and Rahul Reddy both brought the latter deck to Cups.


I hope that the information provided in this post and all the resources I linked to are helpful to anyone still choosing a deck for Worlds or the Nashville Open. Please contact me on Twitter @twhitesell42, @PokeStats_TCG, or on Facebook if you have questions about the data I've collected or just want to hear more of my thoughts on the metagame.