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.
