Saturday, June 13, 2026

NeoGoat Tournament Report — June 11, 2026

The June 11 NeoGoat local brought in 22 players. The event went to 5 rounds, and by the end of the night the standings were extremely tight: five different players finished with a 4-1 record.

It was also one of the more chaotic tournaments we have had recently. A registration mistake with some Round 1 results affected later pairings, and by the time the issue was noticed, Round 4 had already started. The tournament continued from there, producing a strange but memorable final stretch where tiebreakers ended up deciding the final order.

Round 1 — Zombies vs Dino Chaos Loaner

Round 1 featured a Zombie deck against a player testing the new Dino Chaos loaner deck. The Dino Chaos strategy brought a different angle to the tournament, combining aggressive Dinosaur pressure with Chaos tools, but Zombies were able to take the match.

Zombie decks remain a dangerous part of the NeoGoat field because they can pressure early, recur threats, and force opponents to answer the same monsters more than once. In this match, that stability was enough to overcome the newer loaner strategy.

Round 2 — Warrior Mirror Match

Round 2 was a Warrior mirror match, a matchup where small tempo swings can quickly decide the duel. Both players had access to similar pressure tools, but the match was eventually decided by one of the strongest finishers in the format: Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning.

The winning Warrior player pushed with BLS while the opponent only had Call of the Haunted available as defense. It was not enough to stop the attack, and the BLS finish gave the Warrior player the win.

Round 3 — Warrior vs Harpie Lady

In Round 3, the Warrior player from the previous featured match faced a Harpie Lady deck. The Harpie player was still learning how to pilot the deck, but even with that, the deck showed why it can be dangerous when its engine starts moving.

The ability to pressure and remove multiple Spell and Trap cards was decisive against Warrior. On top of that, Harpie Lady 1 and the field spell helped the Harpies reach higher attack values, allowing them to challenge Warrior monsters directly instead of only relying on backrow removal.

Even though Warrior had already shown strong results earlier in the tournament, the Harpie deck managed to take the win and move forward as one of the most interesting decks of the night.

Round 4 — Harpie Lady vs Gadget HERO

When Round 4 started, several players noticed that the pairings looked strange. Some players who had already lost were paired against players who were still undefeated. After reviewing the situation, it was discovered that some Round 1 results had been registered incorrectly.

Since Round 4 had already started, the tournament continued with the current pairings. This made the rest of the event a little messy, but it also created a very unusual final standings situation.

The featured match was Harpie Lady against a new Gadget HERO deck. This strategy used the Gadget engine for steady advantage while including only the necessary HERO pieces, such as Elemental HERO Wildheart, Miracle Fusion, and the new Fusion option Elemental HERO Gaia.

During the match, the Harpie player made an invalid play while still learning the deck, summoning Sky Scout and then using Elegant Egotist. The Gadget player did not notice the error, and the duel continued. This time, the Gadget HERO deck was able to take the match.

Round 5 — Decree Beat vs Gadget HERO

Because of the high number of players, the tournament went to a fifth round. The final featured match placed the undefeated Gadget HERO player against a veteran player using Decree Beat, who had already taken one loss earlier in the tournament.

Then, the veteran player won, leaving no undefeated players in the tournament.

One of the key cards in the match was Don Zaloog. Decree Beat used it to attack the Gadget HERO player’s hand and discard important cards, including Miracle Fusion. This was strangely similar to what happened in Tuesday’s tournament, where Miracle Fusion was also discarded at the worst possible moment.

At this point, Miracle Fusion may need its own bodyguard. Every time a HERO player finally has it ready, some monster shows up and throws it directly into the Graveyard.

Decree Beat managed to stop Gadget HERO from finishing undefeated, creating a final standings table with five players at 4-1. After the tournament software calculated the tiebreakers, the Good Stuff player finished in first place, the Gadget HERO player finished second, and the Decree Beat player who won the final featured match finished third.

Final Standings

Place Player Deck Record
1st Luis Roberto Palacios Cortines Good Stuff 4-1
2nd Lorska Martinez Gadget HERO 4-1
3rd Eduardo Perales (Guest_0001) Decree Beat 4-1

Final Thoughts

This was not the cleanest tournament from an organizational standpoint, but it was still a very valuable night for the format. The field had a lot of variety, including Water Umi decks, Harpies, Warriors, Zombies, Dino Chaos, Gadget HERO, Decree Beat, and several new tech choices appearing across the room.

The June 2026 NeoGoat environment continues to evolve quickly. Even in a chaotic tournament, the result showed that many different strategies can still compete, and that new decks like Gadget HERO are already beginning to find their place in the format.

Thursday, June 11, 2026

NeoGoat Tournament Report — June 9, 2026

The June 9 NeoGoat local tournament brought together 17 players for a full 5-round event. With the June 2026 environment now shaping up, this tournament gave players another look at how Monarch variants, Good Stuff decks, Warriors, Skill Drain strategies, and Phoenix Blade HERO builds are adapting to the new season.

Table 1 was recorded throughout the event, giving a clear view of several important matches from the night. Monarch strategies had a very strong showing, especially the Earth Monarch deck, which managed to fight through multiple different matchups and finish the tournament on top.

Round 1 — Earth Monarch vs Monarch

Round 1 opened with a Monarch mirror-style matchup, as Earth Monarch faced another Monarch deck.

Both decks were trying to establish tribute pressure and control the pace of the duel through removal, defensive traps, and powerful summons. In the end, the Earth Monarch deck came out ahead, showing that its mix of sturdy monsters, tribute threats, and flexible answers could handle another deck playing a similar game plan.

Round 2 — Good Stuff vs Skill Drain Plant

Round 2 featured Good Stuff against a Skill Drain Plant deck.

Skill Drain can be difficult to fight because it changes the value of many classic NeoGoat monsters, forcing players to rely more on raw stats, battle tricks, and spell/trap removal. However, the Good Stuff deck managed to navigate the matchup well and take the win.

This match showed the strength of playing a flexible deck that can still function when monster effects are shut down. Good Stuff did not need one single combo to win; it was able to keep playing through disruption and use its higher card quality to close the match.

Round 3 — Warrior vs Earth Monarch

Round 3 was one of the most interesting matches of the night: Warrior against Earth Monarch.

The first two duels were very fast, with both players quickly pushing through their main lines of play. The third duel was completely different. It turned into a long and tense game where the Warrior player appeared to be ahead for a large part of the duel.

Warrior had pressure, resources, and a strong field, but the Earth Monarch deck kept buying time. After many turns, the Warrior player was close to decking out and had only 50 Life Points remaining. Both players had many cards on the field, creating a complicated board where one correct removal sequence could decide everything.

The key moment came when the Monarch player used Mobius the Frost Monarch to clear the Warrior player’s backrow. That opened the path for an attack into Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning, and with Shrink used at the right time, the Earth Monarch deck managed to steal the win from a position where Warrior had been threatening to take control.

Round 4 — Earth Monarch vs Phoenix Blade HERO


Round 4 matched two undefeated decks: Earth Monarch against the Phoenix Blade HERO loaner deck.

Phoenix Blade HERO is capable of explosive turns thanks to Divine Sword - Phoenix Blade, HERO fusion pressure, and Warrior-based resource loops. However, the Earth Monarch deck was able to keep the match under control and won 2-0.

One of the biggest factors in the match was Thestalos the Firestorm Monarch. In both games, Thestalos discarded the Miracle Fusion that the Phoenix Blade HERO player needed, cutting off an important comeback route and preventing the deck from turning its Graveyard setup into fusion pressure.

This result was important because both players entered the round undefeated. The Monarch deck proved that it could not only win long defensive games, but also stop a deck with strong offensive and combo potential before it got out of hand.

Round 5 — Good Stuff vs Earth Monarch

The final round featured Good Stuff against Earth Monarch.

This was one of the fastest-paced matches of the tournament. Both players were clearly experienced and played quickly, making decisions without wasting time while still navigating a very important final-round match.

Good Stuff had already shown earlier in the tournament that it could handle difficult matchups, but Earth Monarch once again found a way to push through. The decisive moment came from an explosive Return from the Different Dimension turn, allowing the Monarch player to convert banished resources into immediate pressure and close the match.

Final Thoughts

This tournament was a strong showing for Monarch strategies, especially the Earth Monarch build. Across the event, it defeated other Monarchs, Warriors, Phoenix Blade HERO, and Good Stuff, showing that it has the tools to survive long games, answer pressure, and suddenly turn the corner with cards like Mobius the Frost Monarch, Shrink, and Return from the Different Dimension.

The June 2026 NeoGoat metagame is already starting to take shape. Monarchs look very real, Good Stuff remains consistent, Warriors still have dangerous openings, and decks like Skill Drain and Phoenix Blade HERO continue adding variety to the field.

With 17 players and five rounds, this was another competitive local event and another useful look at how the new season is developing.

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Gravekeeper Decks for NeoGoat June 2026

Gravekeeper is one of those archetypes that always feels close to being good in old-school formats. It has a powerful Field Spell, solid Flip monsters, strong defensive stats, and a natural way to punish Graveyard-based strategies. In NeoGoat June 2026, the archetype gets even more interesting thanks to Gravekeeper’s Commandant and Gravekeeper’s Ambusher, which give the deck better consistency and more long-game value than classic Gravekeeper builds.

Gravekeepers were already a real NeoGoat meta deck last year when Royal Tribute was limited to one, and that version could win games by combining Necrovalley pressure with a powerful hand-disruption swing. In June 2026, with Royal Tribute no longer part of the plan, the archetype has to evolve. These builds focus less on stealing games with a single blowout card and more on using Necrovalley, Gravekeeper’s Commandant, Gravekeeper’s Spy, and strong support cards to play real midrange, tempo, and anti-meta games.

Below are four different Gravekeeper builds, each with a different tournament angle.


Gravekeeper Beat

Deck link:
https://neogoat-platform.vercel.app/deck.html?slug=gravekeeper-beat-1781135220979

This is the most aggressive Gravekeeper list of the group. The plan is simple: resolve Necrovalley, turn your Gravekeeper monsters into real attackers, and keep clearing the way with removal.

Under Necrovalley, Gravekeeper’s Assailant and Gravekeeper’s Spear Soldier become 2000 ATK threats, while Gravekeeper’s Commandant becomes a 2100 ATK beater that also searches the Field Spell. The deck also plays Smashing Ground and Lightning Vortex to force damage through established boards.

My Body as a Shield is an important tech here because it protects key monsters from cards like Nobleman of Crossout, Torrential Tribute, Mirror Force, and other destruction-based answers.

# Main Deck
3 Gravekeeper's Commandant
3 Gravekeeper's Assailant
2 Gravekeeper's Ambusher
2 Gravekeeper's Spear Soldier
2 Gravekeeper's Spy
1 Breaker the Magical Warrior
1 D.D. Warrior Lady
1 Exiled Force
1 Gravekeeper's Chief
1 Jinzo
1 Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer
3 Necrovalley
2 Terraforming
2 Book of Moon
2 Smashing Ground
1 My Body as a Shield
1 Heavy Storm
1 Mystical Space Typhoon
1 Pot of Greed
1 Bottomless Trap Hole
2 Dust Tornado
1 Mirror Force
1 Ring of Destruction
1 Sakuretsu Armor
1 Solemn Judgment
1 Torrential Tribute
1 Lightning Vortex

# Side Deck
2 Banisher of the Light
2 Mind Crush
2 Mobius the Frost Monarch
2 Rite of Spirit
2 Royal Decree
2 Sakuretsu Armor
1 Compulsory Evacuation Device
1 Dust Tornado
1 Spirit Reaper

Gravekeeper Monarch

Deck link:
https://neogoat-platform.vercel.app/deck.html?slug=gravekeeper-monarch-1781134402636

This version turns the Gravekeeper engine into a tribute-based midrange deck. Gravekeeper’s Spy gives the deck tribute material, while Rite of Spirit helps rebuild the field after trades. From there, the deck uses Mobius the Frost Monarch, Jinzo, Thestalos, Zaborg, and Gravekeeper’s Chief to convert small field advantages into powerful midgame swings.

This is probably the best version if you expect a lot of backrow, slower decks, or board states where a single tribute summon can break the game open.

The deck also has strong control tools like Brain Control, Soul Exchange, Compulsory Evacuation Device, and Dust Tornado. It is slower than Gravekeeper Beat, but it has more power once it reaches the midgame.

# Main Deck
3 Gravekeeper's Commandant
3 Gravekeeper's Spy
2 Gravekeeper's Guard
2 Mobius the Frost Monarch
1 Breaker the Magical Warrior
1 Exiled Force
1 Gravekeeper's Ambusher
1 Gravekeeper's Assailant
1 Gravekeeper's Chief
1 Jinzo
1 Thestalos the Firestorm Monarch
1 Zaborg the Thunder Monarch
3 Necrovalley
2 Brain Control
2 Terraforming
1 Heavy Storm
1 Mystical Space Typhoon
1 My Body as a Shield
1 Pot of Greed
1 Soul Exchange
2 Dust Tornado
2 Rite of Spirit
1 Compulsory Evacuation Device
1 Mirror Force
1 Ring of Destruction
1 Solemn Judgment
1 Torrential Tribute
1 Tribe-Infecting Virus

# Side Deck
2 Banisher of the Light
2 Bottomless Trap Hole
2 Compulsory Evacuation Device
2 Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer
2 Mind Crush
2 Royal Decree
1 Dust Tornado
1 Gravekeeper's Guard
1 Nobleman of Crossout

Gravekeeper Flip

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Deck link:
https://neogoat-platform.vercel.app/deck.html?slug=gravekeeper-flip-1781133039707

This is the grindiest Gravekeeper build. It focuses on repeated Flip effects with Gravekeeper’s Spy, Gravekeeper’s Guard, Gravekeeper’s Ambusher, Tsukuyomi, Morphing Jar, and Night Assailant.

The main idea is to slow the game down, recycle Flip effects, and keep generating tempo through bounce effects and defensive pressure. Tsukuyomi is the key card here, allowing the deck to reset Spy, Guard, Ambusher, Morphing Jar, and Night Assailant.

This deck can be very annoying for midrange and control opponents, but it is also the most vulnerable to Nobleman of Crossout, which is why My Body as a Shield is especially important in this version.

# Main Deck
3 Gravekeeper's Commandant
3 Gravekeeper's Guard
3 Gravekeeper's Spy
2 Gravekeeper's Ambusher
2 Tsukuyomi
1 Breaker the Magical Warrior
1 Gravekeeper's Assailant
1 Gravekeeper's Chief
1 Morphing Jar
1 Night Assailant
3 Necrovalley
2 Book of Moon
2 Nobleman of Crossout
2 Terraforming
1 My Body as a Shield
1 Heavy Storm
1 Mystical Space Typhoon
1 Pot of Greed
2 Compulsory Evacuation Device
1 Dust Tornado
2 Rite of Spirit
1 Mirror Force
1 Ring of Destruction
1 Solemn Judgment
1 Torrential Tribute

# Side Deck
2 Banisher of the Light
2 Bottomless Trap Hole
2 Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer
2 Mind Crush
2 Royal Decree
2 Sakuretsu Armor
1 Ceasefire
1 Dust Tornado
1 Gravekeeper's Watcher

Gravekeeper Anti-Meta


Deck link:
https://neogoat-platform.vercel.app/deck.html?slug=gravekeeper-anti-meta-1781133224003

This is the most hostile version toward Graveyard and Special Summon strategies. It combines Necrovalley, Royal Oppression, Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer, Banisher of the Light, and Mind Crush to attack several common NeoGoat engines at once.

The idea is to establish a board first, then lock the opponent out of their strongest plays. Necrovalley limits Graveyard interaction, Royal Oppression punishes Special Summons, Kycoo pressures Chaos-style lines, and Mind Crush punishes searched or revealed cards.

This version is a strong metagame call if you expect Chaos, Zombies, Return-style decks, Metamorphosis lines, or other decks that rely heavily on Special Summons and the Graveyard. Against normal-summon beatdown decks, it can feel less explosive, so the Side Deck helps pivot into a more standard midrange plan.

# Main Deck
3 Gravekeeper's Commandant
3 Gravekeeper's Spy
2 Gravekeeper's Assailant
2 Gravekeeper's Guard
2 Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer
1 Banisher of the Light
1 Breaker the Magical Warrior
1 Gravekeeper's Ambusher
1 Gravekeeper's Chief
1 Jinzo
3 Necrovalley
3 Terraforming
2 Smashing Ground
1 My Body as a Shield
1 Heavy Storm
1 Mystical Space Typhoon
1 Pot of Greed
2 Bottomless Trap Hole
2 Dust Tornado
2 Mind Crush
2 Royal Oppression
1 Mirror Force
1 Ring of Destruction
1 Solemn Judgment
1 Torrential Tribute

# Side Deck
2 Book of Moon
2 Compulsory Evacuation Device
2 Mobius the Frost Monarch
2 Rite of Spirit
2 Sakuretsu Armor
1 Dust Tornado
1 Gravekeeper's Ambusher
1 Gravekeeper's Guard
1 Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer
1 Nobleman of Crossout

Final Thoughts

The strongest thing about Gravekeeper in NeoGoat June 2026 is that it does not have to be built only one way. The same core can become an aggressive beatdown deck, a tribute-based Monarch deck, a Flip-control grind deck, or a dedicated anti-meta strategy.

For a blind tournament, the safest pick among these four is probably Gravekeeper Monarch or Gravekeeper Beat, depending on the expected field. Monarch is better into backrow and slower games, while Beat is better when you want to pressure quickly and force opponents to answer your Necrovalley-boosted attackers.

Gravekeeper Anti-Meta is the best metagame call if the room is full of Graveyard engines and Special Summon decks. Gravekeeper Flip is the most technical and grindy option, but also the riskiest if opponents are prepared with Nobleman of Crossout.

Gravekeeper may not be the flashiest archetype in NeoGoat, but with Commandant, Ambusher, Necrovalley, and the right support cards, it has enough tools to compete seriously.

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

June 2026 Loaner Decks: Dinosaurs, Dragons, Warriors, and Archfiends Take the Stage

For June 2026, the loaner deck lineup focuses on classic battle-driven Yu-Gi-Oh! gameplay with four very different ways to win. Each deck rewards clean sequencing, strong combat decisions, and knowing when to commit your power cards.

This month’s four loaner decks are:

Dino Chaos — Dinosaur Beatdown with Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning
Horus Dragon Control — Dragon Beatdown built around Horus the Black Flame Dragon LV8
Phoenix Blade HERO Warriors — Warrior/HERO tempo with banish-based comeback turns
Pandemonium Archfiends — Archfiend Control using Fiend pressure and resource loops

Each deck has its own identity, so whether you prefer aggressive beatdown, boss monster control, toolbox Warriors, or DARK Fiend synergy, there is a loaner deck here with a clear game plan.


Dino Chaos

Jurassic Chaos is a Dinosaur Beatdown deck with a Chaos finisher and serves as a showcase of two of the biggest additions introduced in the June 2026 NeoGoat banlist: the return of Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning and the arrival of the Dinosaur's Rage Structure Deck card pool. The deck’s main goal is simple: summon efficient attackers, control the battle phase, and finish games with overwhelming pressure from Black Luster Soldier.

The Dinosaur engine gives this deck its aggressive core. Unexpected Dai can summon Sabersaurus directly from the Deck when your field is empty, giving you immediate board presence. Jurassic World boosts your Dinosaurs, helping Sabersaurus, Destroyersaurus, Hydrogeddon, and Hyper Hammerhead win battles they normally might not.

Hydrogeddon is one of the deck’s strongest tempo cards. When it destroys a monster by battle, it can summon another copy from the Deck, allowing the deck to snowball quickly. Cards like Book of Moon, Shrink, Smashing Ground, and Bottomless Trap Hole help make sure your monsters win those important combat exchanges.

The deck also includes a strong lineup of classic utility monsters, including Breaker the Magical Warrior, D.D. Warrior Lady, Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer, Spirit Reaper, and Tribe-Infecting Virus. These cards give the deck answers to different situations while also supporting the LIGHT and DARK requirements for Black Luster Soldier.

By combining the newly released Dinosaur support with one of the most iconic monsters in the format, Jurassic Chaos perfectly represents the direction of the June 2026 format: powerful battle-oriented gameplay, aggressive field presence, and exciting new tools for deckbuilders.

Best for players who like: straightforward aggression, battle tricks, tempo removal, Dinosaurs, and finishing games with BLS.


Mausoleum of Dragon

Horus Dragon Control is the biggest and flashiest loaner deck of the month. It uses Dragon support to summon large monsters ahead of curve, then tries to lock the opponent out of spell cards with Horus the Black Flame Dragon LV8.

The centerpiece is Horus the Black Flame Dragon LV6. It is already difficult to answer with spells, and if it destroys a monster by battle, it can level up into Horus LV8. Once Horus LV8 hits the field, the opponent has to play under constant spell negation, which can shut off removal, power spells, and comeback tools.

The deck supports its high-level Dragons with cards like Masked Dragon, Totem Dragon, and Twin-Headed Behemoth. These monsters help maintain tribute material and keep your field stocked. Mausoleum of the Emperor also lets you pay Life Points to summon large Dragons more easily, helping you bring out threats like Horus LV6, Tyrant Dragon, and Armed Dragon LV5.

The deck also has a strong backrow-clearing package. Stamping Destruction is especially important because it destroys an opponent’s Spell or Trap while dealing damage, as long as you control a Dragon. Alongside Heavy Storm and Mystical Space Typhoon, this gives the deck plenty of ways to clear the path for big attacks.

The Side Deck adds even more Dragon power with Dragon’s Mirror and Five-Headed Dragon, giving the deck a potential explosive finisher after the Graveyard is loaded.

Best for players who like: big monsters, Dragon pressure, spell lockdowns, and explosive tribute summons.


Phoenix Blade HERO

Phoenix Blade HERO Warriors is the most technical loaner deck of the four. It combines a Warrior toolbox, HERO support, discard-based removal, and banish-zone payoff cards like Dimension Fusion and Return from the Different Dimension.

The deck uses efficient Warriors to control the field. Elemental HERO Wildheart is one of the most important attackers because it is unaffected by Trap effects, making it very strong against defensive backrow. Zombyra the Dark gives the deck a large DARK Warrior body, while cards like D.D. Warrior Lady, D.D. Assailant, Exiled Force, Don Zaloog, Mystic Swordsman LV2, and Ninja Grandmaster Sasuke provide answers to many different board states.

The HERO engine gives the deck consistency. E - Emergency Call searches Elemental HERO Wildheart or Elemental HERO Prisma, while Miracle Fusion gives access to Fusion threats like Elemental HERO Gaia. Prisma can also help load the Graveyard for later plays.

The real engine card is Divine Sword - Phoenix Blade. By banishing Warrior monsters from the Graveyard, Phoenix Blade can return itself to the hand again and again. This turns it into repeatable discard fodder for Raigeki Break and Lightning Vortex, while also setting up the banished zone for Dimension Fusion and Return from the Different Dimension.

That means this deck can trade resources early, fill the Graveyard, banish its Warriors, and then suddenly bring back multiple monsters for a huge finishing turn.

Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning gives the deck another powerful win condition. With LIGHT and DARK Warriors naturally filling the Graveyard, BLS is easy to enable and can either remove a key monster or push for lethal damage.

Best for players who like: toolbox monsters, graveyard setup, discard traps, banish combos, and explosive comeback turns.


Pandemonium Archfiends

Pandemonium Archfiends is a DARK Fiend control deck built around Archfiend synergy, big attackers, and resource generation through Pandemonium.

The core engine revolves around Archfiend General, Archfiend Heiress, and Pandemonium. Archfiend General can discard itself to search Pandemonium, while Archfiend Heiress can search important Archfiend cards when it is destroyed by battle or sent to the Graveyard by a card effect.

This gives the deck a strong internal search engine. Foolish Burial can send Archfiend Heiress directly from the Deck to the Graveyard, turning it into access to cards like Archfiend General, Terrorking Archfiend, Archfiend Soldier, Desrook Archfiend, or Archfiend’s Roar.

The deck wins through large DARK Fiend pressure. Terrorking Archfiend, Skull Archfiend of Lightning, Archfiend General, Archfiend Soldier, and Summoned Skull give the deck powerful attackers that can quickly take control of combat. With Pandemonium active, the older Archfiend monsters become much easier to maintain.

The control package is also strong. Newdoria removes problem monsters, Spirit Reaper helps stall and attack the opponent’s hand, and Falling Down can steal an opposing monster as long as you control an Archfiend card. Deck Devastation Virus is one of the deck’s most dangerous cards, using large DARK monsters to punish opponents relying on smaller monsters.

The deck also includes a classic Metamorphosis package. Scapegoat can turn into Thousand-Eyes Restrict, giving the deck a powerful removal and control option. The Fusion toolbox gives the deck flexibility beyond standard beatdown.

Best for players who like: DARK monsters, Fiend synergy, control tools, search chains, and grindy resource battles.


Choosing Your Loaner Deck

Each June 2026 loaner deck offers a different style of classic gameplay.

Pick Jurassic Chaos if you want the most direct beatdown deck. It is aggressive, consistent, and has one of the strongest finishers in Black Luster Soldier.

Pick Horus Dragon Control if you want to summon huge monsters and force the opponent to play through a spell-negation lock.

Pick Phoenix Blade HERO Warriors if you want the most combo-oriented deck, with a lot of decision-making around the Graveyard, banished zone, and discard outlets.

Pick Pandemonium Archfiends if you want a slower control deck with strong DARK Fiends, search power, and disruptive traps.

Together, these four decks create a varied loaner format where battle positioning, removal timing, and resource management all matter. Whether you are attacking with powered-up Dinosaurs, locking the opponent with Horus, looping Phoenix Blade, or grinding with Archfiends, the June 2026 lineup gives every player a different path to victory.

Saturday, June 6, 2026

Thursday NeoGoat Tournament – June 2nd, 2026

The Thursday NeoGoat event on June 2nd brought another varied field to the table, with Beastdown, Water, Zombies, Rituals, Gravekeepers, Warriors, Monarchs, and Chaos all appearing across the recorded rounds.

The night ended with Warriors taking the tournament, closing the event with back-to-back wins in Round 4 and the Final Round.

Round 1 – Beastdown vs Water

Winner: Beastdown

Beastdown opened the tournament with a win over Water, showing the strength of straightforward pressure and efficient monster combat against one of the format’s more flexible attribute-based strategies.

Round 2 – Zombies vs Normal Rituals

Winner: Normal Rituals

Round 2 featured one of the more unusual matchups of the night, as Zombies faced a Normal Ritual deck. The Ritual strategy managed to overcome the recursive Zombie gameplan and take the win.

Round 3 – Gravekeepers vs Good Stuff

Winner: Gravekeepers

Gravekeepers defeated Good Stuff in Round 3, using their focused engine and disruptive tools to control the pace of the match.


Round 4 – Warriors vs Monarch

Winner: Warriors

Warriors advanced through Round 4 with a strong win over Monarchs. The deck’s speed, pressure, and access to powerful Warrior support helped it keep control before moving into the final round.

Final Round – Warriors vs Chaos

Winner: Warriors

The final round saw Warriors face Chaos, one of NeoGoat’s most historically powerful strategies. Warriors took the match and secured the tournament win.

Duel 2 was especially explosive: the Warrior deck opened almost perfectly, with Pot of Greed, Heavy Storm, and Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning. BLS alone inflicted more than 4000 damage, creating a decisive swing that Chaos could not recover from.

Final Thoughts

This tournament showed another broad NeoGoat field, with several archetypes and rogue strategies appearing throughout the night. In the end, Warriors stood above the rest, proving once again that explosive openings, strong removal, and efficient battle pressure remain a dangerous combination in the June 2026 format.

Thursday, June 4, 2026

NeoGoat World Cup 2026 ⚽ — Team Event

NeoGoat goes international.

This special event brings together teams of 3 players in a competitive format built around national identity, strategic deckbuilding, and a direct connection to the 2026 World Cup.

This is not just a tournament — it’s a clash of nations.


👥 Event Format

  • Maximum 8 teams (24 players)
  • Minimum 3 teams required for the event to take place
  • Teams of 3 players
  • Fixed positions:
    • Player A
    • Player B (Captain)
    • Player C

Each round is played as:

  • A vs A
  • B vs B
  • C vs C

All three matches are played simultaneously.

👉 The team that wins 2 out of 3 matches wins the round.


🏟️ Deck Construction

Inspired by competitive team formats:

  • The team shares card copy limits:
    • Cards at 3 → max 3 copies across the entire team
    • Cards at 2 → max 2 copies across the entire team
    • Cards at 1 → max 1 copy across the entire team

Additionally:

  • Each team may select 3 Selection Cards
  • These cards can be used normally by each player

Selection Cards ignore the shared team limit, but still respect their individual banlist limits.

This system forces teams to distribute resources and build distinct identities within the team.


⚽ Captain (Player B)

The center player acts as the team captain.

They may assist teammates during duels under the following rules:

  • Can observe the fields of Players A and C
  • Can give short suggestions

Examples:

  • “attack first”
  • “watch out for Mirror Force”

Restrictions:

  • Cannot touch cards
  • Cannot play for the teammate
  • Cannot give long or detailed instructions
  • Cannot slow down the pace of the game

👉 Assistance must be quick and minimal.


🌍 Nations

Each team represents a country.

  • Countries are chosen from the 8 teams that reach the Quarterfinals of the FIFA World Cup 2026
  • Countries cannot be repeated

Nations are purely for identity:

  • team name
  • flag

They do not provide gameplay advantages.

In addition to the main tournament, there is a long-term bonus:

  • When the FIFA World Cup 2026 concludes
  • The team whose country becomes World Champion will receive a special prize

This bonus is independent from the tournament results and will be awarded when the World Cup ends.


🏆 Official Prizing

In addition to the usual participation boosters and regular prize support, NeoGoat World Cup 2026 will feature special prizes for the top teams.

🥇 Champion Team

  • $1,500 MXN in store credit for each player
  • 1 copy of Rescue Rabbit – eFootball Collaboration Promo (EFC1) for each player

🥈 Runner-Up Team

  • $1,000 MXN in store credit for each player

🥉 Third Place Team

  • The accumulated tournament pool

⚽ FIFA World Cup 2026 Special Bonus

When the FIFA World Cup 2026 concludes, the NeoGoat team whose represented nation becomes World Champion will receive an additional prize:

  • 1 copy of Rescue Rabbit – eFootball Collaboration Promo (EFC1) for each player on that team

This special bonus is awarded independently from the NeoGoat tournament results.

Image: Rescue Rabbit eFootball Collaboration Promo (EFC1)

🏆 Tournament Structure

The event uses a Swiss system:

  • 3 Swiss rounds (with 8 teams)
  • All teams play every round

Top Cut

After the Swiss rounds:

  • The Top 4 teams advance to:
    • Semifinals
    • Final

From this point on, it is single elimination.


📅 Date

The event will take place during the weekend:

👉 July 10–12, 2026

Coinciding with the World Cup Quarterfinal stage.

Register your team.


🔥 A Different Kind of Event

NeoGoat World Cup 2026 combines:

  • True team-based gameplay
  • Strategic decisions starting at deckbuilding
  • A solid competitive structure
  • And a narrative that extends beyond the event itself

Build your team, choose your cards wisely…
and step into the international stage of NeoGoat.

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